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Diaspora transfers to Ghana reached a record high in 2025, cementing the country’s Ghanaian community abroad as its single largest source of external financing. Bank of Ghana (BoG) Governor Dr. Johnson Pandit Asiama confirmed at a roundtable in Virginia, United States, on 19 April 2026 that remittance inflows reached nearly $7.8 billion by year-end 2025 – a sharp rise from the $4.6 billion recorded in 2024 under World Bank balance-of-payments methodology, and well above the $1.73–2.7 billion in foreign direct investment received in both years.
By the World Bank’s standard BOP measure, Ghana’s 2024 remittances of $4.6 billion represent approximately 6% of GDP and place the country second in Sub-Saharan Africa for remittance receipts, behind only Nigeria. The BoG’s own broader Summary of Economic and Financial Data, which captures a wider set of transfer channels, recorded $6.65 billion for 2024 – already four times greater than FDI that year.
This guide covers everything the Ghanaian diaspora, expats, and investors need to understand: the volume and trend of flows, who is sending money and through which channels, the regulatory framework, the economic effects, and where policy is heading under the new Remit2Invest initiative.
What Is a Remittance?
A remittance is money sent by a person living or working in one country to family, friends, or businesses in another country. In Ghana’s case, remittances usually come from Ghanaians living abroad who send money home to support relatives, pay school fees, cover medical bills, fund building projects, or invest in local businesses.
Remittances can be sent through banks, money transfer operators such as Western Union or MoneyGram, mobile money platforms, and digital apps. They are different from foreign direct investment because remittances are personal transfers, while FDI is business capital invested by companies.
For many households in Ghana, remittances are not just extra income. They help cover daily living costs, emergencies, education, and long-term goals.
2025 remittance inflows: ~$7.8 billion (BoG Governor, April 2026)
2024 inflows (World Bank BOP): ~$4.6 billion (~6% of GDP)
2024 inflows (BoG Summary Data): ~$6.65 billion (~4x FDI of $1.73bn)
Ghana’s ranking in Sub-Saharan Africa: 2nd (World Bank, 2024)
Largest single source country: United States
Average cost to send $200 to Ghana: ~7% (RemitSCOPE, Q3 2024)
SDG target for remittance costs: less than 3% by 2030
Understanding the Data: Two Remittance Measures
A note on figures before diving into trends. Two sets of remittance data circulate for Ghana, and they differ materially because they use different methodologies.
The World Bank / IMF balance-of-payments (BOP) figure captures formal transfers recorded through official financial institutions under standard international accounting rules. This produces the $4.6 billion figure for 2024, consistent with the World Bank’s Migration and Development Brief 40 (2024) and the figure cited at international conferences.
The BoG’s Summary of Economic and Financial Data uses a broader capture methodology that includes a wider range of transfer channels – particularly mobile money flows. This produced $6.65 billion for 2024, a figure reported by Citi News Room citing the BoG’s January 2025 publication. Informal transfers through couriers and hundi networks are excluded from both measures, meaning true totals are higher than either figure.
When officials or outlets cite different 2024 figures, this is the reason. Both are credible – they measure different things. This article uses the World Bank BOP figure as the internationally comparable benchmark and notes where the BoG’s broader figure is relevant.
Trends and Volumes (2014–2025)
Remittance flows to Ghana have trended upward over the past decade with some mid-period fluctuation. Annual inflows fell from a previous high of approximately $4.98 billion in 2015 to around $3.3–3.6 billion per year between 2016 and 2019, before recovering strongly. The 2020 to 2022 period showed resilience through COVID-19, with inflows reaching approximately $4.3 billion (2020), $4.5 billion (2021), and $4.7 billion (2022). The World Bank’s 2024 Migration and Development Brief recorded $4.6 billion for 2023 – slightly lower than the prior year but with Ghana retaining its second-place ranking in Sub-Saharan Africa.
For 2025, Governor Asiama disclosed at the April 2026 Virginia roundtable that BoG data shows inflows reached nearly $7.8 billion – described by President Mahama in his 2026 State of the Nation Address as “the largest annual inflow ever recorded in Ghana’s history.” Governor Asiama attributed the surge to improvements in the domestic macroeconomic environment: easing inflation, a more stable cedi, and strengthened gross international reserves.
| Year | World Bank BOP Figure (USD) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 2015 | ~$4.98 billion | Previous record high (Stanbic Bank / Statista data) |
| 2016–2019 | ~$3.3–3.6 billion/yr | Declined post-2015; gradual recovery |
| 2020 | ~$4.3 billion | Resilient through COVID-19 |
| 2021 | ~$4.5 billion | World Bank / BoG |
| 2022 | ~$4.7 billion | World Bank Migration & Development Brief |
| 2023 | ~$4.6 billion | World Bank Brief 40, 2024; Ghana 2nd in SSA |
| 2024 | ~$4.6 billion (WB BOP) / ~$6.65 billion (BoG Summary) | BoG January 2025 Summary; ~6% of GDP on WB measure |
| 2025 | ~$7.8 billion (BoG) | BoG Governor, April 2026; record high |
Main Source Countries and Corridors
Ghana’s remittance inflows reflect its diaspora distribution across North America, Europe, and West Africa. Based on RemitSCOPE’s Ghana 2023 Diagnostic – which draws on World Bank estimates – the approximate sender-country shares are:
| Country / Region | Approximate Share of Ghana’s Remittances |
|---|---|
| United States | ~25% (confirmed as largest single source by BoG Governor, April 2026) |
| Nigeria | ~18% (intra-African corridor) |
| United Kingdom | ~15% |
| Côte d’Ivoire (Ivory Coast) | ~8% |
| EU (Italy, Germany, Netherlands combined) | ~18% |
| Togo / Burkina Faso | ~4% / ~3% |
These percentages are estimates from the RemitSCOPE Ghana 2023 Diagnostic and should be read as approximations rather than live BoG statistics. Approximately 36% of total inflow value originates from within Africa, reflecting Ghana’s deep intra-regional migration networks, particularly with Nigeria and Côte d’Ivoire.
Channels and Transfer Costs
Ghana’s remittances arrive through several distinct channels, each with different cost and speed profiles.
Bank Transfers
Traditional wire transfers via correspondent banking relationships are one of the oldest routes. They generally require the recipient to hold a bank account, take one to three business days, and carry fees that reduce the net amount reaching the family. Their reach is limited among unbanked recipients.
Licensed Money Transfer Operators (MTOs)
Firms including Western Union, MoneyGram, Ria, WorldRemit, and Sendwave operate extensive agent networks across Ghana covering banks, supermarkets, and dedicated offices. Transfers can arrive within minutes for cash pickup. MTOs typically charge above the global average due to exchange rate markups in addition to headline fees.
Mobile Money and Digital Platforms
This is the fastest-growing channel. Fintech apps including Remitly and Xoom send directly to MTN, AirtelTigo, and Vodafone mobile wallets. Delivery is near-instant. Ghana’s 2018 mobile money interoperability initiative through GhIPSS linked all domestic networks, allowing any sender’s transfer to reach any provider. The result is a uniquely accessible receive environment, especially for rural and unbanked recipients.
Informal Networks
Community-based networks, trusted couriers, and hundi arrangements remain common, particularly for intra-African corridors. These channels are unregulated, carry foreign exchange risk, and are excluded from all official statistics.
| Channel | Indicative Fee Range | Transfer Time | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bank wire | Higher end of market | 1–3 business days | Requires bank account; less competitive on cost |
| Licensed MTO (cash/account) | Varies; often above average | Minutes to hours | Wide agent network; exchange markup applies |
| Mobile money / digital platforms | Often lower than MTO | Near-instant | Fastest-growing; requires mobile wallet |
| Informal (hundi/courier) | Very low | Same day | Unregulated; FX risk; not in official data |
Regulatory and Policy Framework
Ghana’s remittance industry is regulated through BoG guidelines, financial sector legislation, and digital payment rules that have evolved substantially over the past decade.
Bank of Ghana IMTO Guidelines
All Money Transfer Operators must be licensed by the BoG and must partner with a local bank or licensed payment service provider. The updated 2025 IMTO Guidelines tightened licensing requirements – including a 90-day application assessment window, proof of foreign licensing, and AML/CFT system requirements – and restricted IMTOs to inward person-to-person remittances only. A rule effective January 2026 requires all inward remittances to be converted to Ghana cedis on the same day at BoG-published rates, supporting transparency and formalization of the domestic foreign exchange market. The BoG also bars remittance payouts to corporate accounts to prevent misuse.
Payment Systems and Services Act (Act 987, 2019)
This legislation created the regulatory framework for non-bank remittance providers, e-money issuers, and fintechs. Under Act 987, payment service providers – including MTN Mobile Money and fintech wallets – must register with the BoG and maintain minimum capital reserves.
Mobile Money Interoperability (2018)
From 2018, GhIPSS linked all mobile money networks nationally, enabling transfers between any providers. This significantly extended remittance access to rural and lower-income recipients and is now a foundation of Ghana’s digital financial inclusion strategy.
E-Levy: Introduced 2022, Abolished April 2025
In May 2022, Ghana introduced the Electronic Transfer Levy under Act 1075 at a rate of 1.5% on electronic money transfers above GH¢100 per day – reduced from an initially proposed 1.75% before Parliament passed the bill. The levy was later reduced to 1% under Act 1089. Inward remittances were included, with the charge borne by the recipient. The levy was widely opposed for discouraging digital transactions and disproportionately affecting lower-income earners.
Following the December 2024 elections, Parliament repealed the e-levy on 26 March 2025, and President John Dramani Mahama signed the Electronic Transfer Levy Repeal Act on 2 April 2025. The Ghana Revenue Authority directed all charging entities to cease deductions immediately. The e-levy is no longer in force.
| Year | Policy / Regulation | Effect |
|---|---|---|
| 2018 | Mobile Money Interoperability launched | GhIPSS connects all mobile wallets nationally |
| 2019 | Payment Systems and Services Act (Act 987) enacted | Regulates e-money issuers and remittance PSPs under BoG |
| 2021 | BoG Remittance Service Guidelines issued | Framework for payment providers partnering with MTOs |
| May 2022 | E-levy introduced at 1.5% (Act 1075) | Tax on e-transfers including remittances; recipient-borne |
| 2023 | E-levy reduced to 1% (Act 1089) | Rate cut following low uptake and public opposition |
| 2 April 2025 | E-levy repealed | Electronic Transfer Levy Repeal Act signed; GRA ordered immediate cessation |
| 2025 | BoG IMTO Guidelines updated | Stricter MTO licensing; AML/CFT requirements; 6-year record retention; 24-hour STR filing |
| January 2026 | FX same-day conversion rule effective | All inward remittances must be settled in cedis on day of receipt |
| 2026 | Remit2Invest Initiative launched (BoG) | Diaspora engagement programme to channel remittances into bonds, SMEs, and infrastructure |
AML/CFT Requirements
All licensed remittance providers must implement KYC protocols and report suspicious transactions to the Financial Intelligence Centre within 24 hours. The 2025 IMTO Guidelines require six-year record retention. Ghana’s AML Act (2008) and Financial Intelligence Centre regulations explicitly cover remittances.
Economic Impact
Household Welfare and Poverty Reduction
Empirical research consistently finds that remittances reduce poverty among Ghanaian households. A peer-reviewed study by Adams and Cuecuecha (2013), published in World Development (vol. 50, pp. 24-40), found that remittance-receiving households allocate additional income toward schooling and housing – indicating meaningful investment effects beyond consumption. Rural households use remittances to fund agricultural inputs; urban households use them to smooth consumption and avoid high-cost credit.
Macroeconomic and Foreign Exchange Effects
Because all inward remittances must now be converted to cedis on the day they arrive, the same-day conversion rule supports formalization and the transparency of Ghana’s domestic foreign exchange market. Robust remittance growth contributed to Ghana recording a current account surplus in 2023 – confirmed at $1.407 billion by World Bank annual data, a record high. Remittances are also more stable than FDI: the World Bank noted in its 2024 Brief that remittances to Sub-Saharan Africa were approximately 1.5 times the region’s FDI flows in 2023. In Ghana’s specific case, the BoG’s comprehensive 2024 figure of $6.65 billion exceeded FDI of $1.73 billion by roughly four times.
Financial Inclusion
The growth of mobile-money remittance payouts has drawn many previously unbanked Ghanaians into the formal financial system. Ghana’s financial inclusion rate reached 81% in 2025 according to the World Bank’s Global Findex Report – a significant rise from 68% in 2021 – with mobile money adoption driven partly by remittance inflows playing a central role. Most recipients, however, still hold remittance funds in cash or mobile wallets rather than formal savings accounts, leaving room for further deepening of credit markets.
Consumption vs. Investment
The dominant use of remittances in Ghana remains consumption: food, rent, school fees, healthcare, and family obligations account for the majority of spending. Only a minority is directed into business investment or savings. This is the central structural challenge the BoG’s Remit2Invest initiative is designed to address, by creating diaspora bonds, collective investment schemes, and fintech-enabled savings instruments that can redirect flows toward infrastructure, healthcare, agribusiness, and SMEs.
Challenges
High transfer costs. Sending $200 to Ghana costs approximately 7% of the transfer value (RemitSCOPE Q3 2024) – more than double the SDG Target 10.c goal of less than 3% by 2030. While below the African average of 8.4%, high fees reduce net value to families and incentivise informal alternatives. Digital channels are steadily reducing costs, but the overall market remains expensive.
Data gaps and measurement differences. As the two 2024 figures illustrate, Ghana’s remittance data is not fully standardized across methodologies. Informal flows are excluded from all official measures. The BoG is working to improve data coverage and granularity, including by corridor, channel, and demographic breakdown.
Dependency risk. At approximately 6% of GDP under the World Bank measure, Ghana’s reliance on diaspora flows creates vulnerability. A downturn in the United States – which accounts for roughly a quarter of inflows – could rapidly reduce household incomes and foreign exchange supply.
Fraud and money laundering risk. Diaspora transfers attract scams targeting both senders and recipients. Tightened AML/CFT requirements under the 2025 IMTO Guidelines aim to mitigate this risk through mandatory KYC, 24-hour STR filing, and six-year record retention.
Brain drain. High emigration of skilled workers – particularly in health and technology – reduces domestic productive capacity. Remittances partially compensate but do not fully offset the structural cost to the economy.
Policy Outlook and the Remit2Invest Initiative
The Bank of Ghana’s Remit2Invest initiative, launched in 2026, represents the most significant policy shift in Ghana’s approach to remittances in years. Rather than treating diaspora transfers primarily as household support, the BoG is working with the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre and commercial banks to create structured instruments – diaspora bonds and collective investment schemes – that channel flows into productive sectors.
Governor Asiama framed the initiative at the April 2026 Virginia roundtable as a deliberate transition: from remittances as consumption transfers to remittances as investable capital. Sectors targeted include infrastructure, fintech, healthcare, and agribusiness. The BoG is also exploring fintech innovations including tokenised instruments and digital ledger platforms to cut transfer costs and attract digital-native diaspora investors.
Analysts have noted that rebuilding diaspora trust in Ghana’s financial instruments after the 2022 domestic debt restructuring (DDEP) is a prerequisite for diaspora bonds to succeed. The BoG has acknowledged this challenge publicly. Remitscope’s Ghana 2023 Diagnostic additionally recommends publishing granular corridor and channel data regularly and extending IMTO access to all domestic payment systems including e-zwich.
Sources
- Graphic Online: “Diaspora remittances hit $7.8bn; BoG urges shift into investment” (April 2026)
- Citi News Room: “BoG Governor: Remittance inflows near $7.8bn in 2025, surpass FDI” (April 2026)
- Business & Financial Times: “BoG targets diaspora billions for bonds, SMEs and infrastructure” (April 2026)
- World Bank: Migration and Development Brief 40 (June 2024)
- RemitSCOPE: Ghana Country Diagnostic 2023 (Preliminary Release)
- Citi News Room: “2024 remittances hit $6.65bn, four times higher than FDIs – BoG” (February 2025)
- Bank of Ghana: Updated Guidelines for Inward Remittance Services (Notice BG/GOV/SEC/2025/25)
- Adams, R.H. and Cuecuecha, A. (2013). “The Impact of Remittances on Investment and Poverty in Ghana.” World Development, vol. 50, pp. 24–40
- Ghana Presidency: “Promises Fulfilled: E-Levy and Other Taxes Officially Scrapped” (2 April 2025)
- World Bank Remittance Prices Worldwide
- High Street Journal: “Ghana’s financial inclusion hits 81% in 2025”
- CEIC: Ghana Current Account Balance 2023 ($1.407 billion surplus)
- Citi News Room: “DDEP clouds diaspora bond push despite $7.8bn remittance surge” (April 2026)
Compliance note: All money transfer services must be licensed by the Bank of Ghana. International Money Transfer Operators (IMTOs) operating in Ghana are required to be licensed by the BoG and partner with a locally licensed bank or payment service provider. As of January 2026, all inward remittances must be converted to Ghana cedis on the day of receipt at BoG-published rates. For the official BoG list of licensed IMTOs, visit www.bog.gov.gh