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Grenada Yellow Pages: The Complete Modern Business Directory

By GrenadaSearch TeamJune 12, 2026
Grenada Yellow Pages: The Complete Modern Business Directory

TL;DR: Searching "Grenada yellow pages" usually surfaces outdated print directories and generic Caribbean aggregators. GrenadaSearch.com is the modern replacement: a free, searchable online directory with 1,081 verified business listings across 22 categories and all 6 parishes of the Spice Isle. Whether you're a visitor, resident, or business owner, it's the fastest way to find or be found in Grenada.


If you've ever typed "Grenada yellow pages" into a search engine, you already know the frustration. You're looking for a plumber in St. George's, a restaurant near Grand Anse Beach, or a car hire service at Maurice Bishop International Airport. What you get back is a scattered mix of old printed directories, pan-Caribbean aggregators, and business listings that haven't been updated since the last print run.

Grenada is the Spice Isle of the Caribbean, a 344-square-kilometre island that punches far above its weight in terms of economic energy. Tourism revenue is projected to grow from $58 million in 2023 to around $74 million by 2028, driven by rising stayover arrivals and a recovering hospitality sector. Alongside tourism, the Spice Isle produces around 40% of the world's nutmeg supply, anchoring an agricultural economy that supports hundreds of local businesses across every parish.

Every year, thousands of decisions are made about where to eat, stay, charter a boat, hire a contractor, or book a massage on this island. Finding the right business shouldn't feel like detective work. That's exactly the gap GrenadaSearch.com was built to fill.

This guide explains what the old Grenada yellow pages model was, why it fell short, and how GrenadaSearch works as the modern, always-updated replacement for anyone searching for businesses on the Spice Isle.


What Was the Grenada Yellow Pages?

The annual printed telephone directory served Grenada for over half a century. Published and distributed today by FindYello, the Yello directory covers Grenada, Carriacou, and Petite Martinique in physical book form. The 2026 edition is already in distribution.

The publishers are honest about what made the old model work. For over half a century, Grenadian businesses relied on the telephone directory as a key marketing tool, because people who consult the directory are ready to buy. High-intent searchers. Ready to spend. That buyer behaviour hasn't changed. What changed is where those buyers look first.

FindYello also offers an online version of the directory. It lists phone numbers and addresses for Grenadian businesses. But the platform is a generic Caribbean aggregator covering more than 20 islands. Grenada is one small section of a much larger database. There are no location photos, no parish filters, no business hours, and no connection to how people actually search in 2025.

The result is a useful but limited tool. For visitors planning a trip or locals needing a service fast, it rarely delivers a satisfying answer.


Why the Print-First Model Doesn't Work Anymore

Consumers increasingly took their product searches to the internet, and the wider digital ecosystem gradually eroded the need for Yellow Page marketing. This wasn't a slow drift. It was a structural shift. By the mid-2010s, print directory distribution volumes had cratered worldwide.

The fundamental problem is speed. Traditional directories failed not because they were printed, but because they couldn't update fast enough. A restaurant closes, but its listing stays active for months. A phone number changes the day after the book is printed. A new business opens mid-year and won't appear until the next edition.

For visitors arriving in Grenada, this matters immediately. Someone landing at Maurice Bishop International Airport is searching on a phone. They need photos, opening hours, a map link, and a working phone number. A printed alphabetical list doesn't give them any of that.

Today, 83 percent of consumers find local businesses using an online search engine, and roughly half will visit the storefront they find within one day. In a tourism-driven economy, that first-click decision is worth real revenue. A business that can't be found online is a business that's losing bookings before the visitor ever steps off the plane.

The good news: digital business directories fixed most of these problems. They evolved into something structurally different from their paper ancestors, becoming dynamic, searchable platforms that feed the very search engines people use to find local services. What Grenada needed was one built specifically for the Spice Isle.


What Is GrenadaSearch.com?

GrenadaSearch.com is Grenada's dedicated online business directory with over 1,081 verified listings across 22 categories and all 6 parishes. It's free to search, free to browse, and built exclusively for Grenada. Not for the Caribbean generally. For this island.

Nothing else on the market offers this level of Grenada-specific coverage. GrenadaSearch isn't a generic aggregator with a Grenada tab tucked between Jamaica and Trinidad. Every listing, every category filter, and every parish page is built around the Spice Isle.

The site covers businesses across St. George's, St. Andrew, St. David, St. John, St. Patrick, and Carriacou & Petite Martinique. From boutique hotels along Grand Anse Beach to diving operators near the Molinere Underwater Sculpture Park, from accounting firms by the Carenage to spice tour operators in the estates of St. Andrew, GrenadaSearch maps the island's commercial life in one searchable place.

It's also built for how people actually search. You can type a keyword, browse a category, or click a parish. That's a fundamental upgrade over any alphabetical printed list that hasn't changed its format since the 1970s.


How Do I Find a Business in Grenada Online?

Type any keyword into the GrenadaSearch homepage search bar and results appear instantly. You can also browse 22 category pages or click any of the 6 parish pages to see every business in that area. No account required, no sign-up, no fee.

Here's how each search method works in practice:

Search by keyword. Type what you need: "dentist," "dive shop," "wedding venue," "grocery store," "taxi." GrenadaSearch returns matching businesses with their name, location, category, and contact details. It's the same impulse that used to send you flipping through a phone book, completed in seconds.

Browse by category. Head to the full categories page and pick from 22 options. Looking for somewhere to stay? The Accommodation listings cover 85 properties, from world-class resorts to intimate guesthouses. Need a spa treatment after a long flight? Beauty & Wellness lists 39 options across the island. Fancy a night out near St. George's? Bars & Nightlife brings up 34 results.

Browse by parish. Click any parish page to see every business operating in that area. Spending the week in St. George's? Heading up to St. Patrick's to see Leapers' Hill? The parish filter makes geographic planning straightforward in a way no printed list ever could.

This three-way search capability is the practical difference between GrenadaSearch and any directory that came before it.


What Business Categories Does GrenadaSearch Cover?

GrenadaSearch organises its 1,081 listings into 22 categories, spanning every sector of Grenada's economy. Whatever you'd look up in a traditional yellow pages, there's a matching category here. And unlike the old print model, every listing links directly to the business's contact information, website, and location.

Here's a breakdown of what you'll find:

Tourism and Hospitality. Accommodation leads with 85 listings, covering five-star resorts, boutique hotels, self-catering villas, and small guesthouses across all parishes. Restaurants & Cafes covers the full dining spectrum from fine dining overlooking the Carenage to roadside roti shops. Bars & Nightlife covers 34 options.

Water and Adventure. Boating & Marine lists 9 operators covering yacht charters, dive shops, fishing tours, and watersports. These are the companies that take visitors out to the Bianca C wreck and the Molinere Underwater Sculpture Park.

Health and Beauty. Beauty & Wellness covers 39 listings including spas, salons, physiotherapy clinics, and yoga studios.

Trades and Professional Services. Construction & Trades has 35 listings covering the plumbers, electricians, roofers, and builders that residents and property owners actually need. This is the yellow pages use case in its purest form: someone has a leaking pipe and needs a number fast.

Transport. Car Rental lists 5 hire companies, with options at and near the airport.

Education. With 18 listings, the Education category reflects the strong school, university, and professional training sector anchored by institutions like St. George's University on the island.

Entertainment. Five listings cover tours, attractions, and event venues for visitors wanting organised experiences across the parishes.

The Yello phone book mixed everything into flat alphabetical lists. Plumbers sat next to pizzerias. Hotels appeared before hardware stores. GrenadaSearch organises by category and parish simultaneously. You get the right type of business in the right location in a single filter.


Own a business in Grenada? Get it in front of the visitors and residents searching right now. Add your listing for free or claim an existing entry and take control of your information. It takes less than five minutes.


Which Grenada Parish Should You Browse?

Each of GrenadaSearch's 6 parish pages filters all listings to that specific area of the island. Browse St. George's for the capital and coast, St. Patrick's for the wild north, or Carriacou & Petite Martinique for the sister islands. Each parish has a distinct commercial and tourism character.

Here's what to expect when you browse by location:

Saint George's is the capital and the commercial engine of the Spice Isle. The Carenage, Grand Anse Beach, Fort George, and Maurice Bishop International Airport are all in this parish. St. George's parish has over 1,000 listings, reflecting its status as the island's main hub for accommodation, restaurants, professional services, and retail.

Saint Andrew is the largest parish by land area and sits on the east coast. Grenville, Grenada's second city, is the commercial heart of the parish. This is the agricultural core of the island: lush river valleys, nutmeg and cocoa estates, and the spice plantations that helped earn Grenada its title as the Spice Isle. The St. Andrew listings are growing as more east-coast businesses establish an online presence.

Saint David lies on the southeast coast, quieter than St. George's, known for the Marquis Valley and some of the island's most secluded beaches.

Saint John sits on the west coast, home to Gouyave, Grenada's fishing capital. The Friday Night Fish Fry in Gouyave is one of the most celebrated community events on the island, drawing locals and visitors alike every week.

Saint Patrick covers the northern tip of the island. Levera National Park, Lake Antoine, and the leatherback turtle nesting beaches at Bathway and Levera are all here. Tree-to-bar chocolate experiences at estates in the north bring growing numbers of food tourists. Browse St. Patrick's listings to find the operators, guesthouses, and services based in the north.

Carriacou & Petite Martinique is Grenada's most northerly dependency and a destination in its own right. Known for traditional wooden boat-building, world-class diving, and a quieter pace of Caribbean life, these islands deserve their own directory presence. The Carriacou & Petite Martinique page currently lists 34 businesses and is the most complete online reference available for the island.

No printed phone book ever let you filter by parish and category at the same time. That two-dimensional search is the practical difference between the old yellow pages model and GrenadaSearch.


Why Your Grenada Business Needs a Directory Listing

Grenada's economy grew an estimated 4.7 percent in 2023, driven by tourism arrivals that outpaced growth across the rest of the Eastern Caribbean Currency Union. Near-term growth is projected at 3.9 percent through 2025. The visitors driving that growth are researching their trips online before they arrive.

Getting found matters. Business directories build local citations that improve Google rankings, and 31 percent of the top 10 organic results for average local searches are business directory pages. A GrenadaSearch listing doesn't just reach people browsing the directory. It reinforces visibility in Google search results too.

Each online business listing typically includes the business name, address, phone number, website link, business hours, and customer reviews. These listings build what SEO professionals call citations, and those citations signal to search engines that the business is legitimate and established. For a small business on a small island, that signal is significant.

The practical calculus is simple. A visitor types "boutique hotel Grand Anse" or "rum tour Grenada" into Google. If your business has a complete, accurate listing in GrenadaSearch, your chances of appearing in those results increase meaningfully. An outdated or missing listing means a missed booking.


How to Add or Claim Your Business on GrenadaSearch

Visit grenadasearch.com/add-listing, fill in your business name, category, parish, contact details, and a short description. It's free. Your listing goes live and starts appearing in category and parish searches immediately.

The add-listing process takes under five minutes. You'll need your business name, address, phone number, website URL if you have one, your primary category from the 22 available, and your parish. A brief business description helps search visibility.

If your business is already listed but you don't control it, the claim function lets you update your contact details, add photos, correct your address, and ensure your information is accurate. In a tourism-heavy market, an unclaimed listing with an outdated phone number is a missed booking. Claiming your entry costs nothing.

For businesses that want maximum visibility, premium listings with priority placement, enhanced photo galleries, and featured positioning in category pages are available. Transparent pricing is at grenadasearch.com/pricing. Think of it as the modern equivalent of taking out a bold advertisement in the old Yello directory. The difference: this one works 24 hours a day, updates in real time, and reaches visitors planning their trips weeks before they arrive.


Conclusion

The Grenada Yellow Pages served its purpose well. For decades it was the best available tool for connecting businesses with buyers on the Spice Isle. But print-first directories were built for a world where people planned holidays with phone books and made purchasing decisions by flipping through alphabetical lists. That world is gone.

GrenadaSearch.com is what the Grenada business directory looks like today. It's searchable, current, organised by both category and parish, and built specifically for this island. With 1,081 listings and growing across all six parishes, it's already the most comprehensive directory Grenada has ever had.

Three takeaways:

  1. If you're searching for any business in Grenada, start at GrenadaSearch.
  2. If you're a visitor planning a trip, use the parish pages to map your stay before you land.
  3. If you own a business on the Spice Isle, a free listing is the lowest-effort, highest-return marketing move available to you.

Browse all Grenada business categories and start finding exactly what you need on the Spice Isle.


Frequently Asked Questions

Is GrenadaSearch the same as the Grenada Yellow Pages? GrenadaSearch.com serves the same core purpose as the old Grenada Yellow Pages: helping people find local businesses. But it's a modern, online-only platform with over 1,081 verified listings, searchable by category and parish. Unlike the printed Yello directory, it updates in real time, includes photos and contact links, and is accessible from any device anywhere in the world.

How do I find a plumber, electrician, or tradesperson in Grenada? Go to grenadasearch.com and type your search term in the homepage bar, or browse the Construction & Trades category directly. That category lists 35 operators covering the major trades across the island. You can further narrow results by parish to find someone in your area. All contact details are included in each listing.

Is it free to list a business on GrenadaSearch? Yes. A standard listing on GrenadaSearch is completely free. You add your business name, address, phone number, category, and a short description at no cost. Your listing appears in category searches and parish filters immediately. Premium upgrades for enhanced visibility and featured placement are available with transparent pricing at grenadasearch.com/pricing.

Does GrenadaSearch cover Carriacou and Petite Martinique? Yes. GrenadaSearch covers all six of Grenada's parishes, including the Carriacou & Petite Martinique dependency. The Carriacou parish page currently lists 34 businesses and is one of the most complete online business references available for those islands. The directory for Carriacou continues to grow as more local operators add their listings.

How is GrenadaSearch different from FindYello for Grenada searches? FindYello is a pan-Caribbean directory covering more than 20 islands from Anguilla to Trinidad. Grenada is one small section of a much larger regional database, with no local content, no parish filtering, and no tourism-specific categorisation. GrenadaSearch is built exclusively for Grenada, with all 22 categories and all 6 parishes tailored to the Spice Isle's tourism and business economy. For Grenada-specific searches, it delivers faster, more relevant, and more complete results.