A directory of the islands’ best shopping, written by the people who walk it.

The Turks and Caicos has been quietly one of the Caribbean’s great shopping destinations for two decades. There’s no sales tax, no VAT, and no luxury tax. There’s an authorised Rolex dealer at Regent Village and a hand-stitched fanner-grass basket on Middle Caicos that takes a single weaver three days to finish. There are three liquor stores in Provo that will deliver Bambarra Rum to your villa, and there’s exactly one cruise port — Grand Turk — where you can buy a watch, ride a FlowRider, and meet a Junkanoo band, all before lunch.

What there hasn’t been is a single, modern, useful directory tying it all together — vetted, written like a person, and built for the way travelers actually plan a trip in 2026: mostly, on a phone, on a beach chair.

That’s tcishopping.com.

Our Mission

Why We Exist

Get Involved

How We Curate

Our Values

Five principles we hold ourselves to — and that you can hold us to.

Who We Serve

Travelers staying on Provo or in a villa. Most of you spend seven to ten nights in Grace Bay. You don’t need a list of every shop — you need the right ones, the right time of day, and often a runner who can deliver Bambarra to your villa before your dinner reservation.

Cruise visitors to Grand Turk. You have, on average, six to eight hours from gangway to all-aboard. The Cruise Center has 45,000 square feet of duty-free retail. We’ll help you decide which forty-five minutes are worth spending where — and what’s worth the cab ride into Cockburn Town.

Plan Something.

Whether you’re seven nights into a stay at Wymara, eight hours off a Carnival ship at the Grand Turk Cruise Center, or a TCI business owner wondering whether a paid listing is right for you — start here.