Self-employed unit expands reach to thousands – NISSS

Barbados’ National Insurance and Social Security Service (NISSS) has announced a landmark milestone for its specialized Self-Employed Unit, revealing that more than 3,000 independent workers have signed up for national social security coverage in just over 14 months since the initiative launched. Officials made the announcement Friday during a celebratory ceremony held at Speightstown Esplanade, where they detailed the community-centered strategy driving the program’s rapid growth and unveiled new flexible payment options tailored to the unique needs of self-employed workers.

Alethea Thomas, acting project manager of the Self-Employed Unit, presented the official progress update at the event, breaking down the results of the unit’s ground-up outreach approach launched on March 17, 2025. By the end of the program’s first full year, 3,039 self-employed Barbadians had completed new registrations, with a sharp late surge pushing totals even higher. Thomas shared that April 2026 alone saw 678 total processed registrations, including 543 first-time sign-ups and 135 reactivations of lapsed coverage, a result she credited to the unit’s intentional, community-facing model.

Unlike traditional social security outreach that relies on centralized bureaucratic offices, the NISSS initiative has shifted to meet independent workers where they already operate. To date, the team has hosted 28 interactive workshops and community sessions across every part of the island, connecting directly with street vendors, skilled tradespeople, creative professionals and other independent workers in their daily work environments. What started as a registration drive has evolved into a long-term relationship-building framework, Thomas explained, that has made NISSS more visible, accessible and trusted among the self-employed community than ever before in the institution’s history.

A key new rollout announced at the ceremony is flexible payment terms designed to accommodate the irregular, fluctuating income streams that are common for independent workers. The initiative’s 15 field officers, all recruited from the local communities they now serve, have been central to the program’s success, Thomas noted, adding that their existing connections to the populations they engage with has helped break down barriers to registration.

Thomas emphasized that the self-employed workforce, whose members make a deliberate choice to “bet on themselves” through independent work, deserve the same long-term social protection that traditional employees access through the national insurance system. “The self-employed persons of Barbados work hard, and they make the necessary sacrifices for themselves, living on their own terms through skill, labour, creativity, and courage that deserves to be honoured,” Thomas told attendees. “What we are offering through the NISSS is the assurance that that hard work pays off, not just today, but for the rest of their lives — that the years of hard work and hustle will lead to somewhere safe, secure, and worry-free.”

She added that every Barbadian, regardless of whether they work for an employer or run their own business, is entitled to financial security during retirement. “Every Barbadian, whether employee or self-employed, deserves those golden years, and it is the mission of the Self-Employed Unit to assure this.” Immediately following the ceremony, the unit’s field officers departed for new outreach stops in Six Men’s Bay and Mile-and-a-Quarter in St Peter, continuing the ongoing registration drive to reach remaining unregistered self-employed workers across the island.