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Startup Guide

Surviving the First 90 Days of Your New Jamaican Business

Week-by-week survival guide for new Jamaican businesses. Covers registration, GCT, compliance, customer acquisition, and financial setup for your first 90 days.

14 min read | 2026-04-01 | VEDTECH Solutions

You've registered your business with the Companies Office of Jamaica (COJ), received your TRN, and maybe even opened a business bank account. Congratulations — but now what? The first 90 days of a new Jamaican business are the most critical. What you do (and don't do) in this window can determine whether your venture thrives or joins the 60% of Caribbean SMEs that struggle past their second year. This comprehensive guide walks you through every essential step, week by week, to give your business the strongest possible foundation.

Before Day One: Pre-Launch Essentials

Many first-time Jamaican entrepreneurs rush to open their doors without finishing the groundwork. Before you serve your first customer, these items must be sorted:

Business Registration & TRN

If you haven't already, register your business name or company with the Companies Office of Jamaica (COJ). A sole trader registration costs approximately JMD $5,000, while incorporating a limited company runs JMD $15,000–$25,000 depending on share capital. Every business entity needs a Taxpayer Registration Number (TRN) from Tax Administration Jamaica (TAJ) — this is non-negotiable.

GCT Registration

If you expect annual revenue above JMD $10 million, you must register for General Consumption Tax (GCT). Even if you're below the threshold, voluntary registration lets you claim input tax credits on business purchases. Visit your nearest TAJ office or register online at tax.gov.jm.

Business Bank Account

Open a dedicated business bank account immediately. Mixing personal and business finances is the number one accounting headache for Jamaican SMEs. Major banks like NCB, Scotiabank, and JMMB offer SME-friendly accounts. Expect to provide your COJ registration, TRN, two forms of ID, and proof of address.

Pro Tip: Don't wait until tax season to separate your finances. Open a business account before your first dollar of revenue comes in — your accountant (and TAJ) will thank you.

Weeks 1–4: Laying the Foundation

Week 1: Set Up Your Books

From day one, track every dollar in and every dollar out. This doesn't mean you need a full-time accountant yet — but you need a system. At minimum, set up:

  • An invoicing process — Professional invoices with your TRN, GCT (if applicable), and payment terms
  • An expense tracking method — Keep every receipt, categorise every expense
  • A bank reconciliation schedule — Match your books to your bank statement weekly

Week 2: Define Your Service/Product Offering

Write down exactly what you sell, at what price, and to whom. Jamaican SMEs that try to be everything to everyone burn through cash faster. Create a simple one-page document covering:

  1. Your core products or services (maximum 3–5 to start)
  2. Your target customer profile (age, location, income level)
  3. Your pricing structure (cost-plus, value-based, or competitive)
  4. Your unique selling proposition — why choose you over the competition?

Week 3: Establish Your Digital Presence

In 2026, Jamaican consumers expect to find you online — even if you're a brick-and-mortar shop. At minimum:

  • Create a Google Business Profile (free, shows you in local search results)
  • Set up a WhatsApp Business account with your catalogue
  • Create an Instagram Business profile with at least 9 posts
  • Consider a simple website or online storefront

Week 4: Know Your Numbers

Calculate your break-even point. How much revenue do you need each month to cover your fixed costs (rent, utilities, salaries, loan payments)? This single number will guide every business decision you make in the coming months.

Break-Even Formula

Monthly Fixed Costs ÷ (Average Sale Price − Variable Cost per Sale) = Number of Sales Needed

Example: If your fixed costs are JMD $250,000/month, your average sale is JMD $5,000, and variable costs are JMD $2,000 per sale, you need 84 sales per month to break even.

Weeks 5–8: Building Momentum

Get Your First 10 Paying Customers

Your only job in this phase is to get paying customers and learn from them. Don't worry about perfection — worry about traction. Strategies that work for Jamaican SMEs:

  • Personal network: Tell every single person you know. Jamaicans do business with people they trust.
  • WhatsApp broadcasts: Share your offering with your contact list (with permission).
  • Local partnerships: Partner with complementary businesses for cross-referrals.
  • Community events: Set up at community fairs, church events, or market days.

Collect Feedback Relentlessly

After every sale or service delivery, ask three questions:

  1. What did you like most?
  2. What could be better?
  3. Would you recommend us to a friend?

This feedback is gold. It tells you what's working and what needs to change before you scale.

Apply for JBDC & DBJ Support

The Jamaica Business Development Corporation (JBDC) offers free business coaching, training workshops, and access to markets for Jamaican SMEs. Register on their website — it's free and the guidance is invaluable for new entrepreneurs.

If you need capital, the Development Bank of Jamaica (DBJ) provides SME loans at rates significantly below commercial banks, often 6–9% per annum versus 15–25% at commercial lenders. Their micro-finance programmes start from as low as JMD $500,000.

Weeks 9–12: Scaling & Systemising

Document Your Processes

If you can't write down how something is done, you can't delegate it. Before you think about hiring, document:

  • How you deliver your product or service (step by step)
  • How you handle customer enquiries and complaints
  • How you process payments and issue invoices
  • How you order inventory or supplies

Automate What You Can

By week 9, you should know which tasks eat up your time. Common time-wasters for Jamaican SMEs include:

Manual Task Automated Solution Time Saved Weekly
Writing invoices in Word/Excel Automated invoicing software 3–5 hours
Tracking expenses with paper receipts Digital expense tracking 2–3 hours
Manually calculating GCT Automatic tax calculation 1–2 hours
Sending payment reminders one by one Automated payment reminders 2–4 hours
Manually reconciling bank statements Bank feed integration 3–4 hours

Review Your 90-Day Numbers

At the end of your first 90 days, sit down with your financials and answer honestly:

  • Are you on track to hit your break-even point?
  • What's your customer acquisition cost?
  • Which products or services are most profitable?
  • What's your cash runway — how many months can you survive at current burn rate?
Milestone Check: If you have paying customers, positive feedback, documented processes, and clear financials after 90 days — you're ahead of 80% of new Jamaican businesses. Well done!

Jamaica has specific requirements that new businesses often overlook. Use this checklist to stay compliant:

Must-Have Compliance Items
  • TRN Registration — Required for all businesses (TAJ)
  • GCT Registration — Required if annual revenue exceeds JMD $10 million
  • NIS Registration — Required if you have employees (Ministry of Labour)
  • NHT Registration — Required for employers (National Housing Trust)
  • HEART/NSTA Levy — 3% of payroll for employers with payroll above JMD $292,212/month
  • Education Tax — Employer and employee contributions
  • Food Handler's Permit — Required for food businesses (Ministry of Health)
  • Trade Licence — Required for retail businesses (Parish Council)
  • Fire Certificate — Required for commercial premises (Jamaica Fire Brigade)

Financial Setup That Saves You Later

Getting your financial house in order from day one prevents the panic that hits most Jamaican businesses at tax time. Here's what to set up immediately:

Chart of Accounts

Even a simple business needs basic accounts: Revenue, Cost of Goods Sold, Operating Expenses (rent, utilities, marketing, transport), and Owner's Equity. Don't overcomplicate it — 15–20 accounts is enough for most startups.

Tax Calendar

Mark these dates in your calendar now:

  • GCT Returns: Due by the 15th of the month following the return period
  • Income Tax Estimated Payments: March 15, June 15, September 15, December 15
  • Payroll Statutory Deductions: Due by the 14th of the following month
  • Annual Return (COJ): Due annually on anniversary of incorporation

Emergency Fund

Set aside at least 3 months of operating expenses in a separate savings account. In Jamaica's economic climate, where currency fluctuations and supply chain disruptions can hit without warning, this buffer is non-negotiable. If JMD $250,000 covers your monthly costs, aim for JMD $750,000 in reserve.

Common Mistakes Jamaican Startups Make

Avoid These First-90-Days Pitfalls
  • Mixing personal and business finances — This makes tax filing a nightmare and can attract TAJ scrutiny
  • Not registering for GCT when required — Penalties accrue from the date you should have registered, not when you actually do
  • Pricing too low to "get customers" — Underpricing trains customers to undervalue your work and kills your margins
  • Ignoring NIS and NHT obligations — The penalties for non-compliance are severe and can include criminal charges
  • No written contracts or agreements — Verbal agreements are a Jamaican tradition, but they don't hold up in court
  • Spending on "nice to haves" before revenue — That fancy office fit-out can wait; cash flow cannot
  • Not tracking expenses from day one — You're leaving tax deductions on the table

How VEDTECH Gets You Organised from Day 1

Starting a business in Jamaica is hard enough without wrestling with spreadsheets and paper receipts. VEDTECH gives you the professional tools you need from day one — without the enterprise price tag.

  • Professional Invoicing — Create GCT-compliant invoices in seconds, with automatic tax calculation and your business branding
  • Expense Tracking — Categorise every business expense as it happens, so nothing slips through the cracks at tax time
  • Financial Reports — See your profit & loss, balance sheet, and cash flow in real time — no accounting degree required
  • Tax-Ready Books — Your books stay organised and TAJ-ready year-round, not just at filing time
  • Multi-Currency Support — Handle JMD, USD, and other currencies seamlessly for international transactions
  • Customer Management — Track every customer interaction, quote, and invoice in one place
Try VEDTECH Free for 14 Days

No credit card required. Set up in under 10 minutes.

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