Have you been looking into getting a US-dollar denominated account where you could receive PayPal deposits, remote job salaries, ACH and wire transfers? The Charles Schwab International account is a great platform for you. It is a brokerage account typically used for investing, however, it comes with a wide range of bank account features that now give you access to a USD account to receive global payments — and the best part is you can open it remotely, with Personal and Joint accounts being free to open.
The problem we don’t talk about enough
There’s a conversation Caribbean professionals have quietly among themselves, usually after a payment gets delayed, a withdrawal gets flagged, or a client’s invoice sits unprocessed for days. It doesn’t make headlines because it doesn’t look dramatic from the outside. But if you’ve spent any time trying to earn internationally while banking locally, you know exactly what I’m describing.
I’ve operated across three markets — Canada, the Caribbean, and now Thailand — and this particular friction follows Caribbean professionals everywhere. Foreign exchange shortages. Local banks that weren’t designed for freelancers and remote workers receiving international payments. Having to connect a local bank account to platforms like PayPal, only to have your hard-earned foreign currencies converted to local TTD and all of its limitations.
This is why getting access to USD rails and denominated accounts is so crucial for us, because the best way to get forex is to generate it yourself. However, the biggest challenge has always been to access your forex without any hindrances. That’s why this account is a key tool for anybody receiving money from abroad, especially from clients or their remote jobs.
Why US banking rails matter
Most digital platforms that pay people — Upwork, Deel, Fiverr, Remote, creator networks, affiliate programmes — were built on US banking rails. ACH transfers, direct deposit, US routing numbers. That’s the infrastructure they assume you have. When your local bank can’t plug into those rails cleanly, every international payment becomes a workaround instead of a transaction.
Most people know Schwab as an investment platform, so it makes sense that the banking side gets overlooked. But for Caribbean freelancers, remote workers, consultants, and digital entrepreneurs, that banking side is the whole point. Trinidad and Tobago, Jamaica, Barbados, Grenada, Guyana, St Lucia — Caribbean countries are in the country selector. The minimum deposit to open is zero dollars.
The Schwab International account routes around the problem entirely. You get a real US routing and account number, ACH and direct deposit capability, a Visa debit card that works globally, and the ability to hold funds in USD without converting everything the moment it lands. You don’t need to be a US citizen. You don’t need to visit the US. The whole application is done online and the debit card gets mailed to wherever you are in the world.
What you need to open the account
The documents required are straightforward. A valid passport, proof of address — a utility bill, lease, or bank statement works — a working email and phone number, and a W-8BEN form. That last one stops people unnecessarily. The W-8BEN is simply an IRS form confirming you’re not a US citizen or resident. It doesn’t make you a US taxpayer. Schwab walks you through it digitally in a few minutes. Approval can take anywhere from a few days to a couple of weeks depending on verification volume — that waiting period is honestly the only real inconvenience in the whole process.
What you can do with it
Once the account is active, you connect it to PayPal. You give the routing and account number to an international employer or client for direct deposit. You use the Visa debit card to spend USD globally without touching local conversion rates. You hold US dollars instead of immediately absorbing whatever exchange rate your bank offers that day. For remote workers dealing with forex shortages or unreliable access to US currency, that last point alone makes the account worth having.
Set it up before you need it
There’s one mistake I see people make repeatedly: they try to set this up the moment they urgently need it. After they’ve landed the remote contract, after the client is waiting on payment details, after the platform won’t release funds because they don’t have a compatible account. That’s the wrong order of operations. The value is in having the infrastructure in place before the opportunity appears — not scrambling to build it after the fact. And once it’s open, keep some activity flowing through it. Small transfers, the occasional debit card use. Dormant accounts get flagged; active ones don’t.
The bigger picture
Caribbean professionals are increasingly competing and earning in a global digital economy while operating on financial infrastructure built for a pre-internet world. That gap is not a minor inconvenience anymore. It’s the difference between appearing like a credible international operator and appearing like someone your client quietly has to work around.
Remote work, digital entrepreneurship, creator monetisation, international consulting — these aren’t niche career paths anymore. They’re the direction the economy is moving. The people who participate fully in that economy are the ones who got their infrastructure sorted out early, not the ones still negotiating with a bank that hasn’t caught up.
The Schwab account doesn’t solve every problem in Caribbean financial access. But for the specific, recurring problem of receiving international payments cleanly and holding US dollars reliably, it solves it well. Set it up before you need it. And stop letting your bank be the reason a client doubts you.
Keron Rose is a Caribbean digital strategist and digital nomad based in Thailand. He helps entrepreneurs build, monetise, and scale their digital presence while accessing global opportunities. Visit Keronrose.com for more digital business strategies and insights.
