Curacao is home to two distinct Caribbean medical schools that often come up together in the same research phase for prospective students: Avalon University School of Medicine and Caribbean Medical University, commonly referred to as CMU. Both are located in Willemstad, both attract students who did not gain entry to US or Canadian allopathic programs, and both operate within a similar USMLE-focused Caribbean medical school framework. Yet they differ in accreditation status, tuition structure, faculty depth, hospital affiliations, student support resources, and how they are perceived by residency programs. For students who have visited both campuses, spoken to current students at both schools, or ultimately chose one over the other, this is the thread to share what actually drove your decision. We want to know what stood out in your research, what questions you asked during your visits that others should be asking, and in hindsight whether the choice played out the way you expected. Both schools deserve a fair and honest comparison and we ask that responses stay factual and experience-based rather than promotional or dismissive in either direction.
I visited both campuses before I committed and the single biggest thing that tipped it for me was the accreditation situation. Avalon has CAAM-HP accreditation which is the recognized regional accrediting body for Caribbean medical schools and that status matters for state medical board eligibility in the US. When I asked CMU the same question about their accreditation pathway I got a vague answer about being in the process of seeking recognition and pursuing various approvals. That kind of answer when you are about to spend over a hundred thousand dollars and four years of your life is not reassuring. Avalon was not perfect but at least I could verify the accreditation independently through CAAM-HPās public database and it came back clean.
The accreditation point is really important and I want to add some context for people who do not know the system. CAAM-HP accreditation affects whether your degree is recognized for licensure in a growing number of US states. Some states explicitly require graduates to hold a degree from a CAAM-HP or similarly recognized accredited institution to sit for licensing exams or to apply for a medical license regardless of your USMLE scores. If CMU does not have that status locked down by the time you graduate, you could pass every Step exam with flying colors and still hit a wall when you try to get licensed in certain states. That is not a hypothetical problem, it has happened to graduates of other unaccredited Caribbean schools and it is devastating after everything you put into getting there.
Exactly and this is not something admissions offices are going to volunteer upfront. You have to ask directly and then verify independently. When I was doing my research I called two state medical boards directly, one in California and one in New York, and asked them specifically what they required from Caribbean medical school graduates. Both mentioned accreditation status as a factor in the licensure application review. That kind of due diligence takes maybe two hours and it could save you from a really painful situation years down the road. I wish more people on forums talked about this part of the decision instead of just comparing tuition numbers.