FILM FIXER BRITISH VIRGIN ISLANDS — HOODLUM PRODUCTION SERVICES
Hoodlum is the expert film fixer British Virgin Islands international productions rely on for marine access, private islands, yacht culture, resort locations and English-speaking coordination across one of the Caribbean’s most visually distinctive filming territories. The British Virgin Islands spans more than 60 islands, cays and rocks across the Sir Francis Drake Channel — a geography that makes local knowledge, inter-island logistics and early permit planning the foundation of every successful shoot here.
The BVI’s protected anchorages, coral reef systems, dramatic rock formations and unspoiled cay beaches make it a strong location for marine documentaries, sailing and watersport content, luxury travel campaigns, conservation films and high-end branded productions. Its proximity to the US Virgin Islands also makes it a practical addition to wider Caribbean multi-territory shoots. Road Town, Spanish Town, marinas, beaches, villas, ports and island channels can support polished Caribbean visuals across Tortola, Virgin Gorda, Anegada, Jost Van Dyke and the smaller outer cays — but that same geography requires careful planning. Many shoots involve boats, ferries, private properties, ports and multi-island logistics that add layers of coordination a single-island shoot does not.
A smooth production depends on early coordination. Entry requirements, work permissions, filming approvals, marine planning, drone authorisation and customs clearance should all be checked before the crew travels. As your film fixer British Virgin Islands authorities already know, Hoodlum helps visiting teams connect these moving pieces into one practical production plan.
See how we work across the Caribbean
FILM FIXER BRITISH VIRGIN ISLANDS — WHY IT WORKS FOR PRODUCTIONS
The British Virgin Islands is especially strong for productions that need sailing, beaches, private-island settings, luxury villas, marine activity and a relaxed but premium Caribbean atmosphere. English is the official language and the US Dollar is the local currency, which helps international productions communicate efficiently with authorities, location owners, boat operators, hotels, customs contacts and local suppliers.
Strong production use cases include travel and tourism campaigns, yacht and sailing content, luxury resort and villa shoots, commercials and branded films, documentary interviews, factual entertainment, marine and beach-based production, and small to medium international crews.
The territory is compact in one sense but not always simple. A schedule involving ferries, boats, ports, weather windows and separate island permissions requires stronger logistics than a single-location resort shoot. A crew moving between Tortola, Virgin Gorda, Anegada and Jost Van Dyke needs earlier planning and more local coordination than a production working within one island’s geography. Working with a film fixer British Virgin Islands productions trust means that complexity is managed before it becomes a problem on the day.
PRODUCTIONS WE HAVE SUPPORTED
Hoodlum has supported international productions across the British Virgin Islands and the wider Caribbean, providing on-the-ground film fixer services from early research through to execution.
Mr Loverman — BBC One Drama Series Hoodlum supported the production of Mr Loverman, the BBC One adaptation of Bernardine Evaristo’s acclaimed novel, providing on-the-ground fixer services across the Caribbean location shoot. We handled local filming permits, location access, crew logistics and coordination with local authorities and suppliers to support the production’s Caribbean sequences.
Vogue España — Editorial Shoot Hoodlum provided full fixer support for Vogue España’s Caribbean editorial production, coordinating location access, permits, local crew and logistics. We managed the on-the-ground production plan from location scouting through to execution, ensuring the creative brief was delivered within local regulations and on schedule.
The Caribbean with Andi and Miquita — Channel 4 Hoodlum supported The Caribbean with Andi and Miquita, the Channel 4 travel series presented by Andi Oliver and Miquita Oliver, across its Caribbean filming schedule. We provided local fixer coordination, location access, filming permissions and logistics support across multiple island locations, helping the production team move efficiently through the region.
BEST TIME OF YEAR TO FILM IN THE BRITISH VIRGIN ISLANDS
The British Virgin Islands has a tropical maritime climate. Hurricane season generally runs from June to November, and productions should plan carefully when exterior days, boats, beaches or multi-island movement are central to the schedule. The dry season is the more reliable option for outdoor filming, but productions can still work during wetter periods with the right contingency planning built in.
Weather planning matters for boat transfers, ferry timing, marine safety, drone work, beach exteriors, private-island access, remote-location communication and equipment protection. A documentary crew with flexible interview locations has a different weather risk profile from a yacht commercial with sunrise, drone and hero sailing shots.
Productions should include backup plans for rougher seas, delayed boats, tropical weather and exposed coastal locations. As an experienced film fixer British Virgin Islands crews have worked with across all seasons, Hoodlum helps productions plan realistic call sheets around weather, movement and marine safety.
Climate: Tropical maritime, moderated by trade winds. The dry season runs broadly from December to June, with January to May the most reliable window for exterior filming, drone work, sailing content and multi-island boat movement. Hurricane season runs June to November, peaking August to October.
The BVI sits in the path of Atlantic hurricanes and has been hit hard in the past — Irma in 2017 caused significant damage and the territory took several years to fully rebuild. Plan carefully for any shoot with exterior, marine or multi-island movement falling within the June to November window. Sea state is as important as rainfall for a BVI production — the Sir Francis Drake Channel can run rough at short notice even outside hurricane season, and boat schedules should always have a contingency day built in.
See our Antigua production guide for comparison
VISA AND ENTRY REQUIREMENTS FOR FILM CREW
Visa-free entry applies to many nationalities for short stays. Travellers are required to complete the online Immigration and Customs Form, available 72 hours before arrival, and present the saved or printed receipt on arrival. [External link: BVI Online Immigration and Customs Portal] Productions should confirm timing and requirements before travel and make sure all crew have completed the online process before departure.
For professional filming, crews should not assume ordinary visitor entry covers paid production activity. Work permissions depend on role, nationality, stay length and whether work is paid locally.
Typical entry documentation may include a valid passport, visa application where required, accommodation details, return or onward travel confirmation, proof of funds, production invitation or support letter where applicable, and the completed online entry declaration.
Visa-required crew should allow two to four weeks. Hoodlum helps crews prepare supporting information so immigration planning, entry forms and production documentation stay aligned. For more detail on entry requirements across neighbouring territories, see our Bonaire production guide.
INTERNATIONAL CREW ACCREDITATION AND WORK PERMISSIONS
International crews should coordinate through local production service providers and the relevant government authorities. Work permissions depend on role, nationality, stay length and whether the activity is paid locally.
Typical documentation may include a production company profile, project synopsis or treatment, crew and cast list, passport copies, shooting schedule, island and location list, equipment and vehicle list, insurance details and local production contact information.
For British Virgin Islands productions, crew documentation should match the real production footprint. If the shoot includes several islands, marine work or port activity, those details should appear clearly in the schedule and support documents. As the film fixer British Virgin Islands productions depend on for cross-island coordination, Hoodlum helps visiting productions keep crew lists, entry documents, insurance and filming information organised so the approval process does not become a knot of mismatched paperwork.
FILM FIXER BRITISH VIRGIN ISLANDS — PERMITS AND PRODUCTION APPROVAL
Filming approvals are coordinated through the Government of the Virgin Islands, relevant ministries, tourism bodies, ports, police and location authorities. The correct route depends on the islands involved, the locations used and whether the shoot includes public activity, boats, ports, roads, drones or private properties.
Typical permit information includes a production synopsis, shooting schedule, island and location list, crew and cast list, equipment and vehicle list, insurance, marine or boat details where applicable, drone details where applicable, and local fixer or production partner information.
Productions should allow two to four weeks for general approvals, with longer lead times for ports, marine work, road control or multi-island logistics. A clear permit request should explain what is being filmed, where the crew will be, how equipment moves, whether boats are involved and whether public access is affected. The film fixer British Virgin Islands authorities liaise with is Hoodlum — we translate the creative plan into practical information that local stakeholders can review and approve efficiently.
THE BATHS AND NATIONAL PARKS TRUST LOCATIONS
The Baths, Virgin Gorda and National Parks Trust Locations The Baths National Park on Virgin Gorda — Grenada’s famous giant granite boulder formations and sea pools — is one of the most recognisable filming locations in the entire Caribbean and is managed by the BVI National Parks Trust. The RMS Rhone Marine Park (a famous wreck dive site off Salt Island), Sage Mountain National Park on Tortola and a number of protected cays and beaches across the territory fall under the same Trust management.
Filming at any National Parks Trust location requires a permit from the Trust directly, separate from any general production authorisation. Applications should include the full production brief, proposed shoot dates, crew size, equipment list, drone details if applicable and a statement of intended use of the footage. The Trust is generally cooperative with serious production enquiries — the key is early contact, a respectful brief and a clear environmental impact statement.
Drone operations over Trust-managed sites require explicit Trust approval before the ASSI/BVI Airports Authority application is submitted — the Trust’s sign-off is a prerequisite, not a parallel process.
Contact the BVI National Parks Trust at bvinationalparkstrust.org.
INTER-ISLAND PRODUCTION LOGISTICS
Inter-Island Production Logistics The BVI’s geography — 60+ islands spread across the Sir Francis Drake Channel — is what makes it visually extraordinary and logistically demanding in equal measure. A production that wants to shoot on Tortola, Virgin Gorda, Anegada and Jost Van Dyke is not planning one shoot; it is planning four, connected by sea transfers that depend on weather, sea state, tidal conditions, boat availability and port access at each location.
Key logistics facts:
- Tortola to Virgin Gorda: Approximately 45 minutes by scheduled ferry (North Sound Express or Smith’s Ferry) or 20–30 minutes by charter speedboat. Virgin Gorda has no commercial airport — all crew and equipment arrives by sea. The Baths are on the south-west tip; North Sound resorts are on the opposite side of the island — allow 20–30 minutes transfer on island.
- Tortola to Jost Van Dyke: Approximately 20–30 minutes by charter or water taxi from West End. No scheduled freight service — all equipment travels by charter boat.
- Tortola to Anegada: Approximately 1.5 hours by scheduled ferry (limited service, check current schedule with BVI Ferry services). The island is flat, remote and has very limited infrastructure — accommodation, water and power must all be factored in for any overnight stay.
- Private islands and cays: Accessible by charter boat only, with no customs or immigration facilities. Equipment taken to private cays should remain under the original Temporary Import Declaration — keep documentation on the boat at all times.
Equipment freight: All large equipment packages (camera cases, lighting rigs, grip) travel by cargo boat or charter. Plan freight movement the day before shooting days where possible — arriving on the same boat as the crew with full equipment is a recipe for a late start. Confirm dock access at every destination location before the production begins.
Weather contingency: Build at minimum one weather contingency day into any multi-island schedule. A sea crossing that is standard in calm conditions can be genuinely unsafe in 2m+ swells. This is not a risk to take with crew and expensive equipment.
LOCAL CREW AND EQUIPMENT IN BRITISH VIRGIN ISLANDS
Local Crew and Equipment The BVI has a small but established local production and hospitality industry, primarily based on Tortola. Production assistants, local drivers, boat operators, location scouts and logistics contacts with international production experience are available. Specialist production crew — camera operators, gaffers, sound recordists, art department — should be brought from outside the territory or sourced from neighbouring St. Thomas (USVI) or Puerto Rico, which are both within reasonable travel distance and have larger production communities.
Equipment rental on-island is very limited. Productions should bring all camera, lighting, grip, drone and sound equipment. Dive equipment for underwater shoots is available through local dive operators — confirm broadcast specification suitability in advance. US Dollars are the local currency, which simplifies budgeting for American productions.
PRIVATE ISLANDS, RESORTS, VILLAS AND MARINAS
Private islands, villas, resorts and marinas require direct owner or manager agreements. Marine filming may also require boat operator contracts, port coordination and safety plans.
A strong location agreement should confirm approved filming areas, shoot dates and hours, crew size, equipment access, boat or dock access, parking and loading arrangements, drone use where relevant, guest or resident privacy rules, fees and payment terms, cancellation terms and restoration responsibilities.
The British Virgin Islands is known for high-end island and sailing environments, which can give productions premium visual value. Those same locations often have strict rules around privacy, guest access, brand visibility, dock operations and marine safety. As a film fixer British Virgin Islands location owners and resort managers know, Hoodlum helps crews identify realistic locations, negotiate access and keep location agreements aligned with the actual production schedule.
MARINE FILMING AND INTER-ISLAND LOGISTICS
Marine logistics are one of the biggest planning factors for any film fixer British Virgin Islands productions bring into the territory. A shoot may need ferries, private boats, tenders, marinas, port access, crew transfers, gear movement and weather contingency across multiple islands and open water.
Productions should plan for boat operator contracts, marine safety procedures, life jackets and safety equipment, weather and sea-condition monitoring, port or marina permissions, gear loading and waterproofing, communication between boats and land teams, and backup movement plans for every inter-island leg.
Inter-island travel can look simple on paper and become complicated on the day. A delayed ferry, rough sea, restricted dock or missing loading window can affect the schedule quickly. A crew moving from Tortola to Anegada faces a different logistical challenge from one working between Tortola and Virgin Gorda — distance, vessel type, landing conditions and equipment handling all vary by island. Hoodlum helps crews build marine movement into the production plan rather than treating it as background transport.
PRODUCTION TIMELINE — WHAT TO PLAN FOR
Production schedules depend on hard numbers. Here is what international crews should build into their timelines when working with a film fixer British Virgin Islands side. All approval streams should run in parallel — each process is independent and waiting for one before starting another adds weeks to pre-production.
General filming permission through the BVI Film Commission and relevant government departments takes 2 to 3 weeks from submission of a complete application. [External link: BVI Film Commission] During December to April peak season, allow 4 to 5 weeks. Incomplete submissions restart the clock.
Marine park and nature reserve permits through the BVI National Parks Trust are the longest lead item in the approval chain and require a minimum of 3 to 4 weeks. [External link: BVI National Parks Trust] Peak season extends this to 5 to 6 weeks. If your shoot involves the Baths on Virgin Gorda, the RMS Rhone Marine Park or any protected reef system, submit the National Parks Trust application before any other local approval.
Drone authorisation for standard coastal and terrestrial locations runs through the BVI Airports Authority and UK Civil Aviation Authority and takes 2 to 3 weeks. Protected areas — including national parks, marine reserves and airspace near Terrance B. Lettsome International Airport on Beef Island — require 4 to 5 weeks standard, 6 to 7 weeks during peak season. Submit drone applications at the same time as the main filming permission, not after.
Equipment customs through Terrance B. Lettsome International Airport clears same day for carried baggage with a complete ATA Carnet and serialised equipment list. Sea freight arriving at Road Town port and ferry terminal requires 5 to 7 working days for broker coordination, inspection and release — longer during peak holiday periods.
Visa-free nationalities including UK, US, Canadian, EU and most Commonwealth passport holders require no advance processing for stays under 30 days. Visa-required nationalities should allow 3 to 4 weeks standard, 5 to 6 weeks during peak season. Where work authorisation or a production visa is required, allow 4 to 6 weeks and begin that process immediately.
As a working rule, shoots involving marine locations, drone work and an international crew requiring visas need a minimum of 8 weeks pre-production lead time. As the film fixer British Virgin Islands productions depend on for parallel processing, Hoodlum runs all approval streams simultaneously to compress that timeline where possible.
DRONE FILMING REQUIREMENTS IN THE BVI
Drone use requires aviation approval and compliance with airspace and safety rules. The British Virgin Islands operates within the ASSI framework for UK Overseas Territories. Commercial drone operations are regulated under the Air Navigation (Overseas Territories) Order administered by the UK Civil Aviation Authority in coordination with the BVI Airports Authority.
Applications should be submitted to the BVI Airports Authority. Airspace restrictions around Terrance B. Lettsome International Airport on Beef Island must be confirmed before any aerial shoot plan is finalised. Protected areas including the Baths on Virgin Gorda and the RMS Rhone Marine Park require separate clearance from the BVI National Parks Trust. Drone approval should be handled separately from general filming permission — location approval, marine access and filming permission do not automatically authorise drone flights.
Typical drone documentation includes drone specifications, pilot certification, insurance, flight plan, proposed dates and times, take-off and landing areas, nearby sensitive zones and safety procedures. Allow 2 to 3 weeks for standard locations and 4 to 5 weeks for protected or restricted areas. Hoodlum aligns drone permissions with location plans, marine logistics, customs preparation and the wider shoot schedule as part of the film fixer British Virgin Islands service.
EQUIPMENT CUSTOMS CLEARANCE
Professional filming equipment should be prepared for temporary import before travel. Productions should confirm ATA Carnet acceptance and temporary import procedures with customs before departure.
Typical customs documentation includes a temporary import declaration or carnet where applicable, a full equipment list with serial numbers and declared values, proof of ownership, a production support letter, permit support documentation and freight or airway bill details where relevant.
Carried baggage with complete documentation clears through Terrance B. Lettsome International Airport on Beef Island and can often be processed same day. Sea freight arriving at Road Town port and ferry terminal requires broker coordination and should allow 5 to 7 working days. Equipment moving between islands during production may require additional documentation checks at inter-island transfer points.
Shoots should have detailed gear lists covering cameras, lenses, drones, batteries, lighting, grip, sound gear and marine equipment. Salt air, boat transfers and open ocean humidity create specific equipment risks — all gear should travel in sealed waterproof cases, and drone batteries must be accounted for separately on customs documentation.
EQUIPMENT PLANNING — MARINE AND INTER-ISLAND SHOOTS
The BVI’s combination of salt water, boat transfers, open ocean humidity and inter-island handling creates specific equipment risks that don’t apply the same way on single-island destinations. This is one area where working with an experienced film fixer British Virgin Islands crews trust makes a measurable difference to how gear arrives and performs on shoot days.
Salt air corrodes exposed metal and electrical contacts rapidly. All camera bodies, lenses, audio gear and electronic equipment should travel in sealed waterproof cases. Silica gel packs, lens cloths and corrosion-inhibiting treatments should be part of the kit list. Equipment left on deck or in open boat storage is at risk — plan covered storage on every vessel transfer.
Every inter-island move involves open-water boat transfers. Pelican cases or equivalent waterproof hard cases are the minimum standard. Soft bags and standard rolling cases are not appropriate for sea transfers. Equipment moving to Anegada by small aircraft has strict weight and size limits — confirm case and pack weights with the charter operator before departing Tortola.
Standard production equipment insurance may exclude marine activity, boat transfers and underwater use. Confirm your policy covers marine transit, saltwater exposure, diving operations and equipment on vessels. The BVI National Parks Trust may request proof of insurance as part of the marine permit application for wreck and reef filming.
KEY FILMING LOCATIONS — BRITISH VIRGIN ISLANDS
The BVI’s 60-plus islands and cays offer dramatically varied production environments within a single territory. Each location carries its own access conditions, permit requirements and logistical considerations. As your film fixer British Virgin Islands side, Hoodlum manages site-specific approvals as part of every location plan.
The Baths, Virgin Gorda is the BVI’s most recognisable location — dramatic granite boulder formations and tidal pools within a protected national park managed by the BVI National Parks Trust. Permit required in addition to general filming permission. Limited crew access windows, conservation protocols and no drone operations without separate clearance. Allow 3 to 5 weeks for approvals.
The RMS Rhone Marine Park, Salt Island is one of the Caribbean’s most iconic wreck and underwater filming locations. A protected heritage site with strict conservation protocols governing lighting, physical contact with the wreck structure and the number of divers in the water simultaneously. Safety divers, a licensed dive operator and a boat captain familiar with the site are required. National Parks Trust marine permit required — allow a minimum of 4 weeks.
Soggy Dollar Bar, White Bay, Jost Van Dyke is one of the Caribbean’s most recognisable beach bar settings and a strong location for travel, lifestyle and branded content. Accessible by boat only — no ferry dock at White Bay. Private property agreement required for commercial shoots.
Anegada reef flats and beaches represent the BVI’s most remote and visually distinctive outer island environment. Accessible only by sea or small aircraft. Home to a flamingo colony and one of the Caribbean’s largest barrier reef systems. Exceptional for conservation, natural history and unspoiled coastal content. The most logistically complex island in the group — plan equipment scheduling here first.
Sir Francis Drake Channel offers protected sailing waters and open ocean aerials between Tortola and the outer islands, strong for sailing, watersport and high-end travel content. Wind and sea state planning essential for boat and drone shoot days.
Road Town Harbour, Tortola is the main production base and logistics hub — harbour setting for interviews, documentary and commercial work, and the primary point for sea freight customs clearance.
BVI VERSUS USVI — PLANNING THE RIGHT TERRITORY
Productions frequently scout both territories together. The two share a geography but operate under entirely separate jurisdictions, permit frameworks and logistics chains. Understanding the difference is part of what a film fixer British Virgin Islands and USVI experienced teams need to know before committing to a location plan.
The BVI is a UK Overseas Territory operating under British law, with drone operations regulated by the UK Civil Aviation Authority in coordination with the BVI Airports Authority. The USVI is a US territory where US federal law applies and drone operators work under FAA Part 107 rules. Both territories use the US Dollar.
US crews entering the BVI need a passport — BVI entry is not covered by US domestic travel rules. US citizens entering the USVI travel on domestic rules without a passport requirement. Equipment entering the BVI is subject to separate customs procedures and requires an ATA Carnet or temporary import documentation. US-registered equipment moving to the USVI travels within US customs territory without separate import procedures.
Visually, the BVI is less developed and quieter — protected anchorages, outer cays that remain largely unspoiled and a sailing culture that gives productions a distinctly unhurried Caribbean aesthetic. The USVI offers more infrastructure, busier tourist environments and the urban Caribbean setting of Charlotte Amalie on St Thomas for productions that need a larger-scale backdrop.
The BVI is strongest for sailing content, marine documentaries, conservation films, luxury travel campaigns and productions that need an unspoiled island look. The USVI is better suited to productions with larger crew infrastructure needs, US market requirements or an urban Caribbean visual.
SAFETY AND SECURITY FOR PRODUCTIONS
The British Virgin Islands is generally a safe filming destination, but productions should plan carefully for marine safety, inter-island travel, hurricane season and remote-location communication.
Key safety considerations include boat and ferry safety, life jackets and marine supervision, weather monitoring during hurricane season, remote communication plans, secure storage for equipment, supervised vehicles and docks, medical access for remote islands, insurance aligned with marine activity and backup plans for delayed transfers. Every film fixer British Virgin Islands production plan Hoodlum builds includes a safety and contingency layer matched to the specific shoot activity.
FILM INCENTIVES AND PRODUCTION BENEFITS
No widely published automatic British Virgin Islands film rebate should be assumed. Any production facilitation, tourism support or project-specific assistance should be confirmed directly with tourism or government authorities before budgeting.
Production friendliness is not the same as a guaranteed incentive. Written confirmation is needed before assuming reduced fees, support services, customs assistance, waivers or financial benefits. Before budgeting support, productions should confirm whether the project qualifies, which authority can approve it, whether approval is needed before spending, whether local suppliers must be used, whether location fees still apply, whether customs or marine costs remain separate and whether support applies to commercial activity.
HOW THE MAIN APPROVALS FIT TOGETHER
The main approvals should be planned together, even though they are separate processes. Entry permission may allow a crew member to arrive, but it does not approve filming. A film approval may support the shoot, but it does not automatically clear marine work. A private-island agreement may secure access, but it does not replace drone or customs approval.
A proper production plan connects crew entry and visa status, work permission checks, filming approvals, private location releases, marine and port requirements, drone authorisation, customs clearance, insurance and safety planning. British Virgin Islands productions can involve more moving parts than a single-island shoot. The film fixer British Virgin Islands productions rely on is Hoodlum — we help teams turn those separate requirements into one usable workflow.
WHEN THE BVI IS THE RIGHT CHOICE
The British Virgin Islands is a strong choice when a production needs yacht visuals, private-island settings, beaches, marinas, luxury villas, English-speaking coordination and marine movement. It is especially suitable for sailing and yacht campaigns, tourism films, resort and villa content, beach commercials, documentary interviews, adventure and travel programming, marine lifestyle stories, branded social content and small factual crews.
It may be less suitable for productions that need major studio infrastructure, dense urban scale, extensive backlot control or heavy technical builds. Film fixer British Virgin Islands support is most effective when the concept fits the territory’s natural strengths — water, islands, sailing, luxury hospitality and movement by sea.
COMMON MISTAKES TO AVOID
Most production problems in the BVI come from late planning, unclear documentation or underestimating marine logistics. Avoid assuming visitor entry covers paid production work, forgetting the online immigration and customs process, leaving filming approvals until the final week, treating drone approval as automatic, booking private islands without written releases, underestimating ferry and boat timing, arriving with incomplete equipment lists, ignoring hurricane season contingency, assuming incentives exist without written confirmation, and working without a film fixer British Virgin Islands authorities and location owners already know.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS — FILM FIXER BRITISH VIRGIN ISLANDS
Do I need a film permit to shoot in the British Virgin Islands?
Yes. Commercial filming requires permission from the BVI Film Commission and relevant government departments. Additional approvals are required for national parks, marine reserves and protected sites managed by the BVI National Parks Trust. A general visitor entry does not cover paid production activity — commercial filming intent must be declared and approved before the crew arrives.
Who issues drone permits in the BVI?
Commercial drone operations are regulated under the Air Navigation (Overseas Territories) Order, administered by the UK Civil Aviation Authority in coordination with the BVI Airports Authority. Applications are submitted to the BVI Airports Authority. Airspace restrictions around Terrance B. Lettsome International Airport on Beef Island must be confirmed before any aerial shoot plan is finalised. Protected areas including the Baths and the RMS Rhone Marine Park require separate clearance from the BVI National Parks Trust.
Can I film at the Baths on Virgin Gorda?
Yes, with a permit. The Baths is a protected national park managed by the BVI National Parks Trust and requires a separate location permit in addition to general filming permission. The site receives high visitor numbers, which affects crew access and scheduling. Productions should plan for restricted hours, a limited equipment footprint and conservation-compliant protocols. Drone operations require additional clearance. Allow 3 to 5 weeks for approvals.
How do I film on the RMS Rhone wreck site?
The RMS Rhone Marine Park is a protected underwater heritage site managed by the BVI National Parks Trust. Filming requires a specific marine park permit, and productions must comply with conservation protocols that restrict lighting rigs, physical contact with the wreck structure and the number of divers in the water simultaneously. Safety divers, a licensed dive operator and a boat captain familiar with the site are required. Allow a minimum of 4 weeks for the permit — longer during December to April peak season.
What customs documentation do I need for filming equipment in the BVI?
Professional filming equipment should enter under an ATA Carnet or temporary import declaration. A full serialised equipment list with declared values is required. Carried baggage with complete documentation clears through Terrance B. Lettsome International Airport and can often be processed same day. Sea freight at Road Town port requires broker coordination and 5 to 7 working days. Equipment moving between islands may require additional documentation checks at inter-island transfer points.
How do I move filming equipment between BVI islands during a shoot?
Gear travelling from Tortola to Virgin Gorda, Jost Van Dyke or Anegada moves by scheduled ferry, private water taxi or charter vessel — there are no inter-island road connections. Fragile and specialist equipment should be packed in waterproof hard cases for sea transfers. Anegada is the most logistically complex outer island, accessible only by sea or small aircraft, and requires the earliest planning for equipment scheduling. As your film fixer British Virgin Islands side, Hoodlum coordinates vessel bookings, inter-island handlers and equipment transfer logistics as part of the production plan.
Is the BVI good for underwater and marine filming?
Yes. The BVI is one of the Caribbean’s strongest marine filming destinations. The Sir Francis Drake Channel offers protected anchorages and calm diving conditions. The RMS Rhone wreck is among the most filmed dive sites in the Caribbean. Reef systems around Anegada and the outer cays offer relatively undisturbed environments for conservation and natural history content. Visibility regularly exceeds 20 metres. All marine filming requires permits from the BVI National Parks Trust.
How far in advance should I apply for filming permits in the BVI?
For shoots involving marine locations, drone work and an international crew requiring visas, 8 weeks of pre-production lead time is the minimum. General filming permissions take 2 to 3 weeks. Marine park and protected site permits take 3 to 5 weeks. Drone approvals for protected areas take 4 to 5 weeks. All streams should run in parallel from the point the shoot is confirmed. Productions arriving during December to April peak season should add at least 2 additional weeks to every estimate.
Does the online entry portal apply to visiting crews?
Yes. Travellers are required to complete the online Immigration and Customs Form, available 72 hours before arrival. All crew should complete the form before travel and have the saved or printed receipt available on arrival. Productions should confirm the current portal process before the crew departs.
Is there a film rebate in the BVI?
No widely published automatic film rebate should be assumed. Any support should be confirmed directly with government or tourism authorities before budgeting.
FILM FIXER BRITISH VIRGIN ISLANDS — HOW HOODLUM SUPPORTS YOUR CREW
Hoodlum provides practical film fixer British Virgin Islands support for international crews from early research through on-the-ground execution. The aim is to make the shoot workable before the crew arrives and keep the moving parts aligned during production.
Support includes local fixer coordination, filming approval support, location research and access, private-island and villa agreements, crew and supplier coordination, entry documentation support, drone planning, customs preparation, marine logistics support, boat and ferry coordination, accommodation support, safety planning, hurricane-season contingency and on-the-ground logistics throughout the production.
Film fixer British Virgin Islands support is most valuable when crews need one clear route through entry requirements, filming approvals, ports, customs, aviation checks, marine planning and daily logistics. Hoodlum reduces uncertainty so the production can focus on the shoot instead of the paperwork.

