FROM THE GROUND UP
Gabrielle Gilpin-Hudson is rewriting real estate leadership in Jamaica
AT 32 years old, Gabrielle Gilpin-Hudson has shattered a 60-year record to become the youngest president in the history of the Realtors Association of Jamaica (RAJ). Born in 1993, Gilpin-Hudson belongs to a generation often associated with speed and disruption. Yet her leadership style is anything but hurried. Measured, thoughtful, and grounded, she brings a steady hand to an industry that has been embracing transformation.
Long before the titles and accolades, she decided excellence and integrity were non-negotiable. Her trajectory has a significant impact across the RAJ, where she has served as a volunteer, committee member, director, committee chair, and vice-president, before being elected president in 2024.
That progression matters, particularly to an association whose members are deeply invested in professionalism, fairness, and representation. Gilpin-Hudson understands the organisation from the inside out: its strengths, its growing pains, and the gap between where it stands and where it must evolve.
“I grew into this industry from the progressive roles I’ve taken on over the years,” said Gilpin-Hudson. “This presidency is a mandate to elevate the RAJ to be ready for what’s ahead and we’re doing exactly that.”
A proud past student of Immaculate Conception High School, The University of the West Indies, Mona, and Norman Manley Law School, Gilpin-Hudson is the first to admit that all three institutions shaped her discipline and her sense of duty. She speaks often of Jamaica as her responsibility, her home, and a place whose systems, standards, and industries must be strengthened for future generations.
That sense of responsibility was nurtured in her formative years. As a child, she spent weekends trailing her grandfather on construction sites, absorbing the realities behind the industry. As concrete and steel rose from the ground, she learned what the blueprints never showed: The coordination, the setbacks, the sheer force of vision required to will something permanent into existence. It was there that she also learned that real estate surpasses buildings. It was about the people, the meticulous planning, and the immense patience required to move from design to completion.
“To do this work well, you have to understand how every part connects,” she said. “The law, the financing, the vision, the governance. Excellence is built in the details.” And she knows exactly how each cog in the real estate machinery works. Why? At age 28, Gilpin-Hudson became one of Jamaica’s youngest licensed real estate dealers, founded her own law firm, Grant, Henry & Rhooms, and helped lead the operations and marketing of a 425-home development in Hanover, one so transformative it brought the parish its first traffic light.
Her professional footprint spans major developments and transactions across the island, alongside service on national boards and committees focused on governance, regulation, and best practices. But it is her voluntary service to the RAJ that she describes as some of the most demanding and most meaningful work she has done. Notably, Gilpin-Hudson took on the presidency while eight months pregnant with her second son, a vivid reminder that life unfolds on divine timing, not our own schedule. “To others, the timing may not have seemed ideal, but to me, both were long-awaited dreams and blessings, so I embraced them both,” she said.
Since taking office, she has been leading a modernisation of the association’s operations, updating systems that had not kept pace with the realities of the changing market. Processes have been digitised, a new website and online payment system are in development, and the team has strengthened advocacy across education, ethics, governance, and technology. Leadership, she has learned, is as much a multilayered role as it is a balancing act. It’s being present when members are frustrated. Being accessible when systems fall short. And, being steady and strategic when the days are tough. “I value this investment in Jamaica’s real estate future. Our board of directors is disciplined and strategic about every move we make,” she said.
Gilpin-Hudson noted that Jamaica has some of the lowest real estate prices per square foot in the Caribbean, with considerable opportunities. “There is serious untapped value and room for exponential sustainable growth in the industry,” she added. “Our work has to move the needle. We have to leave things better than we found them.”
Judy Benjamin, first vice-president of the RAJ, said Gilpin-Hudson’s leadership style is new for the organisation. “It is timely as we move into an era where governance, operational efficiency, and relationships are critical to success and longevity. We’re leading discussions around critical issues that directly affect both industry professionals and Jamaicans across the island,” Benjamin noted. “So her natural tendency for advocacy, inclusion and accountability is necessary as we focus on advocating for shorter real estate transaction times and assist in the development of our nation by providing clean real estate data.”
As the RAJ marks its 60th anniversary this year, Gilpin-Hudson views the milestone as confirmation of the association’s importance. “The RAJ has been around almost as long as independent Jamaica, and we will continue to be a pillar in the development of the nation,” she announced. “Our association is the voice of real estate in Jamaica. When we speak, it must continue to be credible, ethical, and globally respected. That is the legacy we are building.”