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Ghana Citizenship > News > Crime > Ghana Firearm Laws: Licensing, Ownership, and Penalties Explained

Ghana Firearm Laws: Licensing, Ownership, and Penalties Explained

Ghana’s framework for controlling firearms is built on the Arms and Ammunition Act (NRCD 9), enacted on February 1, 1972, and amended twice – in 1996 and again in 2001. Under this law, any civilian who wants to own a firearm must register it at a police station and obtain a permit to possess it.

If that sounds simple, here is the real picture: the system is administered by the Central Firearms Registry (CFR) under the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) of the Ghana Police Service, and it has historically been paper-heavy, although officials have been moving toward computerization and online service delivery. As of 2019, officials said about 1.2 million firearms were registered, but fewer than 100,000 licences were renewed annually, while another 1.1 million firearms were estimated to be unregistered. That pointed to a major compliance and enforcement gap.

That gap matters because it drives everything happening in 2025 and 2026: a proposed National Arms Bill is moving through stakeholder review, a Gun Amnesty Programme ran from December 2025 through January 2026, and the Interior Minister announced in March 2026 that the registry will be digitized. For anyone living in or relocating to Ghana, understanding what the law actually requires – and where enforcement is tightening – is now more relevant than it has been in years.

 

 

 

Ghana firearm laws operate as a layered system – not a single code. Three separate bodies of law interact to govern who can own a weapon, where it can be carried, and what happens when things go wrong.

 

The Core Firearms Statute: NRCD 9 (1972)

The Arms and Ammunition Act/Decree, 1972 (NRCD 9) is the primary law governing civilian possession of firearms in Ghana. It requires registration of all arms and ammunition at a police station, inspection of the weapon before registration is accepted, and issuance of a permit to possess subject to stated conditions. The same law restricts manufacture, import, and export without prior written consent from the relevant authority.

Two amendments updated this statute. The Arms and Ammunition (Amendment) Act, 1996 (Act 519) added a fees provision, updated penalty language, and inserted definitions for dealers and magazines (storage facilities for arms and ammunition). The Arms and Ammunition (Amendment) Act, 2001 (Act 604) updated schedule elements including acquisition details.

 

Supporting Laws You Should Know

Statute Key Relevance to Firearms
Public Order Act, 1994 (Act 491) Empowers the Minister of Interior to ban possession or carrying of arms in specified areas by executive instrument – commonly used during elections and security operations.
Criminal Offences Act, 1960 (Act 29) Creates serious criminal liability for possession of a firearm, explosive, or ammunition without lawful excuse (first degree felony); also covers carrying offensive weapons in public and discharging firearms in towns.

It is worth noting that Ghana’s legal framework has been widely described – including by the National Commission on Small Arms and Light Weapons (NACSA) – as fragmented and aging. That framing is precisely why a draft National Arms Bill is now being reviewed for modernization aligned with ECOWAS and global standards.

 

Licensing Categories and Who Can Apply

Ghana does not operate a rigid taxonomy of firearm licence types the way some countries do. The Central Firearms Registry (CFR) identifies purposes rather than classes, and the controls vary by weapon type and the intended use. Here is how the system maps out in practice.

Purpose Evidenced in Official Sources Controlling Authority Key Constraints
Self-protection (civilian) Yes – explicitly recognized by the CFR Police firearms licensing office; CFR/CID oversight Must be in an individual’s name only; not registered to any company or organization
Hunting (“gaming”) Yes – explicitly recognized by the CFR Police firearms licensing office Shotgun transfers handled at local firearms licensing offices with both parties present
Sport shooting Not specified as a distinct category in retrieved primary sources Likely processed under general lawful-purpose framing The proposed National Arms Bill is expected to introduce clearer categories
Private security use Police regulate private security organizations separately Police Private Security Organization unit; Interior Ministry Firearms are not registered in a company or corporate name; any armed arrangement must still satisfy Ghana Police Service and Ministry of Interior rules.
Licensed dealers and importers Yes – CFR keeps records and inspects dealer stock Police + Interior Ministry (for import/export approvals) Defined as first or second class by annual import volume; dealer magazines (warehouses) are subject to regular inspection
Collectors Not specified in retrieved official sources Not specified No public primary material retrieved; treated as unspecified pending reform

One point that surprises many people: the Ghana Police Service states clearly that firearms are not registered in a company or corporate name, because an organization is treated as an “artificial person” that cannot complete the licensing process. Anyone seeking to arm security personnel within a business must structure the arrangement through licensed individuals.

 

Eligibility Requirements

The Central Firearms Registry sets out the baseline criteria for a personal firearm application. To qualify, an applicant must meet all four of the following conditions.

Requirement Details
Minimum age 18 years or older
Mental health Must be certified mentally sound
Physical fitness Must be physically fit
Character Must be of good character (assessed at police discretion)

Eligibility screening is described by the CFR as discretionary in implementation. There is no published pass/fail rubric for “good character” in the accessible primary sources – this is evaluated by the firearms licensing officer as part of the process. Applicants are directed to report to the police firearms office to be taken through the procedure as outlined under NRCD 9.

Additionally, a licensed firearm is expected to be used exclusively by the individual in whose name it is registered, and only for the stated purpose. Lending or sharing a licensed firearm is not permitted under this framework.

 

Ghana Firearm Laws: Application Process and Fees

 

How the Application Works

A complete published document checklist is not available on the police or Ministry of Interior portal, but the legal structure of the process is clear from NRCD 9 and CFR guidance:

  • The applicant reports to the nearest police station (specifically the firearms licensing office) to begin the process under NRCD 9.
  • The arm or ammunition must be presented for physical inspection before registration is accepted.
  • Once approved, the authorized police officer issues a permit to possess specifying the purpose and conditions of use. The permit may require the holder to account for ammunition use.
  • Pistols and revolvers require approval at the Commissioner of Police/CID level. Shotgun transfers are handled at the local firearms licensing office with both parties present.

 

Fees

Two official fee signals appear in public sources. The Ministry of Interior’s fees and charges page lists a licensing/registration fee line for Private Security and Firearms purposes – these are ministry-level processing fees and may not represent the complete all-in cost of civilian acquisition in every case. Separately, the GHS 10 renewal fee for short guns (shotguns) was cited by a senior NACSA program officer in 2019. Note that the Ministry also lists a separate “Permit to Import and Possess a Pistol” fee of GHS 5,000. Currency figures use Bank of Ghana interbank mid rates from March 13, 2026 – rates fluctuate, so check bog.gov.gh before making payments.

Fee Type GHS USD (approx.) GBP (approx.) RMB (approx.)
Licensing/Registration – Standard 1,500 138 104 953
Licensing/Registration – Expedited 2,000 184 139 1,270
Short gun (shotgun) licence renewal 10 0.92 0.70 6.35

The gap between the Ministry’s GHS 1,500 licensing fee and the GHS 10 annual renewal cited by NACSA officials likely reflects different fee layers – a ministry processing charge versus a police-level renewal cost. Currency figures above use Bank of Ghana interbank mid rates from March 13, 2026. The GHS has been volatile in recent years, so verify current rates at bog.gov.gh before relying on them. An authoritative, gazetted unified fee schedule was not available in public sources at the time of writing, so GHS amounts should also be confirmed at the CFR or Ministry of Interior before payment.

 

Possession, Renewal, and Transfer Rules

 

Permit Validity and Renewal

Under NRCD 9, a firearms permit is valid for six months, or for another period that the Inspector-General of Police determines. If a permit expires without renewal, the holder must surrender both the permit and the firearm and ammunition covered by it. In practice, the Interior Ministry described in March 2026 that licences are treated as expiring at the end of each calendar year – regardless of when they were originally issued – which is consistent with the statute’s allowance for the Inspector-General to define validity periods administratively.

Compliance with renewal requirements has historically been very low. Small arms officials cited fewer than 100,000 annual renewals against an estimated base of 1.2 million registered firearms as of 2019.

 

Transferring a Registered Firearm

NRCD 9 requires written permission from the Inspector-General of Police before any sale, disposal, or transfer of possession. The original permit must be surrendered and the firearm re-registered to the new holder. The CFR frames this as a general rule that “a firearm once licensed in the name of a person is not transferable,” while acknowledging the exceptions for formally approved transfers. The higher-level approval required for pistols and revolvers (Commissioner of Police/CID) versus the local-level process for shotguns reflects the practical tiering within that system.

Inheritance on death is not explicitly addressed in accessible primary sources. Based on the transfer framework, inherited firearms would logically need to go through the same re-registration and permission pathway – but this should be confirmed with the CFR directly, as no specific directive on inheritance procedure was publicly available at the time of writing.

 

Ghana Firearm Laws on Carry, Storage, and Public Display

Ghana does not have a formal “open carry vs. concealed carry” licensing structure. Instead, the law uses a purpose-and-permission framework that controls when and where a firearm can be in public hands at all.

NRCD 9 prohibits public display of arms and ammunition – including at traditional ceremonies – without a permit or written consent from the Inspector-General of Police. Discharging a firearm in a public place also requires prior consent. The Criminal Offences Act (Act 29) separately creates a misdemeanour offence for carrying an offensive weapon in a public place or at a public assembly without lawful authority, and a distinct offence for discharging a firearm in a town without lawful and necessary occasion.

On top of these statutory limits, the Public Order Act (Act 491) empowers the Minister of Interior to prohibit possession or carrying of arms in any specified geographic area by executive instrument – a power used regularly around election periods and sensitive security operations.

 

Storage Requirements

NRCD 9 grants the relevant authority power to make regulations on the conveyance, storage, possession, and use of arms and ammunition. The CFR’s functions include controlling and monitoring the movement of arms, and inspecting dealer magazines and warehouses. However, specific household safe-storage standards – such as requirements for locked cabinets, trigger locks, or separation of ammunition from firearms – are not set out in the accessible primary sources. This should be treated as partially specified and confirmed with the CFR at point of registration.

 

Criminal Penalties Under Ghana Firearm Laws

Penalties arise from both the firearms statute itself and the broader criminal law. The key provisions are set out below.

Legal Basis Offence Penalty (as stated in retrieved text)
NRCD 9 (Arms and Ammunition Decree) Contravention of the decree; permit breaches; obstruction; false statements; forgery of permits; suspicious possession of explosives Fine or imprisonment up to 5 years, or both (fine expressed in legacy cedi terms; redenomination may affect the operative amount)
Criminal Offences Act (Act 29), section 192 Possession, custody, or control of a firearm, explosive, or ammunition without lawful excuse First degree felony; prosecution requires written consent of the Attorney-General
Criminal Offences Act (Act 29), section 206 Carrying an offensive weapon in a public place or at a public meeting without lawful authority Misdemeanour (specific penalty quantum not stated in accessible sources)
Criminal Offences Act (Act 29), section 209 Discharging a firearm in a town without lawful and necessary occasion; knowingly permitting discharge on premises Fine (expressed in legacy cedi terms in the reproduced excerpt)

In a notable published case, a man identified as Mohammed Ali was jailed for 10 years for firearms possession and robbery-related offences in Tumu, according to a Ghana Police Service press release. That outcome illustrates how firearms charges interact with other criminal offences – the combined sentence can be substantially longer than the standalone firearms penalty.

In practice, unlawful possession can trigger far more serious prosecution than a simple administrative licensing breach. Section 192 of the Criminal Offences Act – which treats unlawful possession as a first degree felony – represents the most significant legal exposure for anyone found holding a firearm without a valid licence, well beyond the NRCD 9 penalty of up to five years. The NRCD 9 penalties themselves are also expressed in legacy cedi denominations from 1972, meaning the current fine equivalent is not clear from the statute text alone.

 

Import, Export, and Dealer Obligations

No person may import or export arms, ammunition, or explosives in Ghana without prior written consent from the governing authority, and any permit issued may be subject to conditions and restrictions. Manufacture of firearms without written consent is also prohibited under NRCD 9.

In practice, the Central Firearms Registry states that import/export permit applications by licensed dealers or individuals are submitted to the Minister responsible for the Interior for approval. The Interior Ministry’s 2025 budget estimates confirm that this process operates at low volumes – in 2024, only 11 permits to import arms and ammunition were issued, and 55 permits to import pistols (against a target of 105), signaling that approvals are tightly controlled and the Interior Minister confirmed in early 2026 an intention to slow approvals further.

Licensed dealers are subject to ongoing CFR oversight. The CFR keeps records of all licensed arms and ammunition dealers and conducts regular inspections of their stock levels and storage magazines (warehouses). First and second class dealer categories are defined by annual import volumes under the amended statute.

 

2025-2026 Reforms and Policy Changes

Ghana’s approach to firearms regulation is in active transition. The following developments have occurred in the past year and remain relevant to anyone engaging with the system.

 

National Arms Bill

The National Commission on Small Arms and Light Weapons (NACSA) convened a two-day high-level stakeholder meeting on July 23-24, 2025 to review a proposed National Arms Bill. The commission framed the bill explicitly as modernizing Ghana’s legal framework and aligning it with the ECOWAS Convention on Small Arms and Light Weapons, the Arms Trade Treaty (ATT), and the UN Programme of Action on SALW. The bill moves toward cabinet and parliamentary processes but had not been enacted at the time of writing.

 

Gun Amnesty Programme

Ghana’s Ministry of Interior launched a Gun Amnesty Programme on December 1, 2025, offering a window for owners of unlicensed firearms to voluntarily surrender or register them without fear of arrest or prosecution. The programme was extended to January 30, 2026 via a published Ministry release. Anyone who did not take advantage of this window during the amnesty period should be aware that enforcement tightening is now the stated policy direction.

 

Digitization of the Registry

In March 2026, the Interior Minister publicly announced a policy direction to slow the approval of new firearms licences, regulate importers more tightly, and digitize the firearms registry to improve traceability and accountability. That push accelerated a process already underway – the CFR has been in the process of computerizing its system, and the Interior Ministry launched an online digital services portal in late 2025 that includes arms and ammunition permit-related services. The Minister described manual recordkeeping as a barrier to tracing firearms and maintaining data integrity. Once digitization is complete, the current compliance gap – where over a million licences are unrenewed and effectively untracked – is expected to become far more visible to enforcement authorities.

 

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Sources

 

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