Eight comprehensive guides and printable PDF checklists — free for every client and business considering operating in Guyana. Each guide is available as a full web article and as a branded downloadable PDF.
All guides are free. Click Read Guide to view the full web article, or Download PDF to save the printable checklist. PDFs are branded and formatted for printing.
Documents needed, coverage options explained, exactly what to do after an accident, and how to make a motor claim in Guyana.
How to value your property correctly, what to insure, flood and fire considerations, and what to do when you need to claim.
How to protect your Guyanese property, vehicles, and family from the USA, Canada, UK, or anywhere else — entirely remotely.
Identify every uninsured exposure in your business. A practical checklist covering property, liability, motor, money, fidelity, cyber, and more.
NIS, Group Personal Accident, Group Life & Health, and pension schemes — how Guyana's employee benefits framework works and what every employer needs.
10-question self-assessment for Caribbean businesses. Understand your cyber exposure and identify critical gaps before an incident occurs.
Every insurance requirement, AML/CFT obligation, NIS framework, and coverage recommendation for foreign businesses and returning investors.
The five required documents for insurance compliance under Guyana's Anti-Money Laundering legislation — with full explanations of each.
Pre-contract checklist for energy sector contractors. Every coverage type, limit, endorsement, and COI requirement operators demand.
Official Guyanese legislation relevant to insurance and business operations. Links open official government sources. Our guides summarise the key provisions relevant to clients.
Governs all insurance activity in Guyana. Sections 40-42 prohibit direct placement with non-admitted carriers. Sections 232-234 authorise Special Broker's Licence holders to place directly to international markets.
Regulates banks and financial institutions operating in Guyana. Relevant to businesses arranging consumer credit, mortgagee interests, loss payable clauses, and any banking arrangements tied to insurance coverage.
Requires all financial service providers — including insurance companies and brokers — to verify the identity of clients before any business relationship begins. Monitored by the Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU).
The Bank of Guyana is the central bank and financial system regulator. It oversees the Office of the Commissioner of Insurance, enforces the Insurance Act, and publishes regulatory guidance for businesses in Guyana.
If you need guidance that isn't covered here, our brokers will answer your question directly.