[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
Ghana investment law 2026 for foreign investors

What the Ghana Investment Promotion Authority Bill 2026 Means for Foreign Investors, Practical Guide

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Ghana’s Parliament has passed the Ghana Investment Promotion Authority Bill 2026, replacing the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre (GIPC) Act, 2013 (Act 865) and fundamentally reshaping Ghana investment law 2026 for foreign investors. The new legislation removes the longstanding general minimum capital requirements that have defined market-entry economics for over a decade, introduces streamlined registration pathways through the renamed Ghana Investment Promotion Authority (GIPA), and overhauls the incentives framework available to qualifying enterprises. For general counsel, CFOs, and international investors evaluating Ghana as a destination, these changes demand an immediate review of existing compliance postures and prospective deal structures.

This practical guide breaks down every material change, provides step-by-step registration checklists, maps sectoral exceptions, and sets out post-registration obligations so that decision-makers can act with confidence.

Executive Summary, TL;DR for Decision-Makers

The Ghana Investment Promotion Authority Bill 2026 introduces the most significant reforms to Ghana’s foreign investment regime since 2013. Here is what matters most:

  • General minimum capital thresholds removed. The USD 200,000 minimum for joint ventures with Ghanaian participation and the USD 500,000 minimum for wholly foreign-owned enterprises under the GIPC Act are abolished for most sectors.
  • New registration body. The Ghana Investment Promotion Centre is reconstituted as the Ghana Investment Promotion Authority (GIPA), with updated mandates covering registration, promotion, and aftercare services.
  • GIPA certificate required. Foreign enterprises must still register with GIPA and obtain a certificate before commencing business operations in Ghana.
  • Incentives framework updated. New and restructured incentives, including tax holidays, customs duty reliefs, and accelerated capital allowances, are available through a more transparent application process.
  • Certain exemptions removed. Exemptions previously available under the GIPC Act, including the spouse exemption for foreign nationals married to Ghanaian citizens, have not been retained in the new law.
  • Trading company restrictions may persist. While general minimums are removed, industry observers expect that sector-specific capital or licensing thresholds, particularly for trading (retail) companies, will continue to apply under subsidiary legislation.

Immediate actions for incoming investors:

  • Audit existing GIPC registrations and confirm transitional validity under GIPA.
  • Reassess capital structuring for planned investments, the removal of general minimums may allow phased capital deployment.
  • Engage local counsel to confirm sector-specific requirements before committing to a market-entry timeline.
  • Review eligibility for new incentives and prepare supporting documentation early.

Background: From the GIPC Act (2013) to the Ghana Investment Promotion Authority Bill 2026

The GIPC Act, 2013 (Act 865) served as Ghana’s principal foreign investment statute for over a decade. It established the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre, mandated registration for enterprises with foreign participation, set minimum capital thresholds, and reserved certain sectors, notably petty trading and small-scale retail, exclusively for Ghanaian nationals. The Act aimed to balance investor attraction with domestic economic protection, but in practice the fixed capital floors and bureaucratic registration processes were frequently cited as barriers to entry, particularly for small and medium-sized foreign enterprises and AfCFTA-linked investments.

The decision to replace the GIPC Act was driven by several converging factors: Ghana’s obligations under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), the need to improve the country’s competitiveness rankings, and a policy push to simplify regulatory pathways. The resulting Ghana Investment Promotion Authority Bill 2026 was introduced in Parliament, debated, and passed to create a modernised statutory framework that aligns with contemporary trade and investment policy objectives.

Legislative Timeline

Date / Period Event Practical Effect
2013 GIPC Act (Act 865) enacted Established GIPC, set USD 200k / USD 500k minimum capital thresholds, reserved sectors for Ghanaians
2020–2024 AfCFTA implementation discussions and investment climate reviews Highlighted need to harmonise Ghana’s investment rules with continental trade commitments
2025–2026 GIPA Bill introduced in Parliament Bill debated, amended, and passed; replaces GIPC Act entirely
2026 (pending) Presidential assent and commencement New GIPA regime takes effect; transitional provisions govern existing GIPC registrations

Note: This article will be updated within seven days of the official publication of the GIPA Act’s commencement date. Investors should confirm the exact effective date with local counsel before relying on the new provisions.

Key Legal Changes Foreign Investors Must Know Under Ghana Investment Law 2026

Removal of General Minimum Capital Requirements, Scope and Exceptions

Under the GIPC Act, a foreign investor entering a joint venture with a Ghanaian partner was required to invest a minimum of USD 200,000 in equity capital or its equivalent in goods. A wholly foreign-owned enterprise faced a higher threshold of USD 500,000. These floors applied across most sectors and were widely regarded as a significant barrier, particularly for technology, services, and agribusiness investors who did not require large upfront capital outlays.

The Ghana Investment Promotion Authority Bill 2026 removes these general minimum capital requirements. The practical effect is substantial: foreign investors can now structure capital deployment in phases, match equity commitments to actual operational needs, and enter sectors where the previous thresholds made small-scale entry uneconomical. Early indications suggest this change will be especially impactful for AfCFTA-linked enterprises seeking to establish Ghanaian operations as a regional hub.

However, the removal is not absolute. Industry observers expect that sector-specific minimum capital thresholds, particularly those applying to trading companies, mining, petroleum, and banking, will continue to be set by subsidiary legislation, sectoral regulators, or the GIPA Board through regulations made under the new Act. Investors must therefore confirm on a sector-by-sector basis whether any capital floors apply to their specific business activities.

New Registration Types and Permits (GIPA Certificate)

The Bill replaces the GIPC certificate with the GIPA certificate, which remains a mandatory prerequisite for any enterprise with foreign participation intending to operate in Ghana. The registration process under GIPA is designed to be more streamlined, with clearer timelines and a consolidated application pathway. The new regime also contemplates different registration categories to accommodate varying investment sizes and sector profiles.

Incentives Framework, New Incentives and How to Apply

The Bill introduces an updated incentives regime that expands the range of benefits available to qualifying foreign investors. These include sector-targeted tax holidays, customs duty exemptions for capital goods, and accelerated depreciation allowances. The application process is integrated into the GIPA registration workflow, meaning investors can apply for incentives concurrently with their certificate application, a significant efficiency gain over the previous sequential process.

Changes to Previously Allowed Exemptions

Notably, the GIPA Bill does not retain certain exemptions that existed under the GIPC Act. The most consequential change is the removal of the spouse exemption, which previously allowed a foreign national married to a Ghanaian citizen to be treated as a Ghanaian for investment threshold purposes. Under the new law, such individuals will be subject to the same registration and compliance requirements as any other foreign investor. Investors who previously relied on this exemption should reassess their registration status and compliance obligations immediately.

Comparison: Old GIPC Rules vs New GIPA Rules

Issue GIPC Act (Act 865) GIPA Bill 2026
Minimum capital, JV with Ghanaian partner USD 200,000 Removed (subject to sector-specific rules)
Minimum capital, Wholly foreign-owned USD 500,000 Removed (subject to sector-specific rules)
Minimum capital, Trading enterprises USD 1,000,000 Likely retained via subsidiary legislation; confirm with GIPA
Spouse exemption Available, foreign spouse of Ghanaian citizen treated as Ghanaian Removed, foreign spouses treated as foreign investors
Registration body Ghana Investment Promotion Centre (GIPC) Ghana Investment Promotion Authority (GIPA)
Incentives application Sequential, apply after registration Concurrent, apply alongside GIPA certificate
100% foreign ownership permitted Yes, in most non-reserved sectors Yes, in most non-reserved sectors

Step-by-Step Compliance and Market-Entry Playbook for Foreign Investor Registration in Ghana

Pre-Entry Diligence

Before committing to a Ghana market entry, foreign investors should complete the following preliminary steps:

  1. Sector eligibility check. Confirm that the intended business activity is not reserved exclusively for Ghanaian nationals (e.g., petty trading, small-scale mining). Verify whether sector-specific capital thresholds apply.
  2. Legal structure selection. Determine whether to establish a wholly foreign-owned subsidiary, a joint venture with a Ghanaian partner, or a branch of a foreign company. Each carries different registration, tax, and liability implications.
  3. Tax planning. Evaluate Ghana’s tax treaties, corporate income tax rates, withholding tax obligations, and available incentives before finalising the capital structure.
  4. Land and title diligence. If the investment involves real property, conduct thorough title searches, Ghana’s land tenure system involves customary, leasehold, and government lands, each with distinct acquisition procedures.

Company Formation and Registration Flow

The standard company formation process in Ghana follows a well-established sequence that precedes the GIPA certificate application:

  1. Name reservation, Apply to the Registrar General’s Department (RGD) to reserve the proposed company name.
  2. Company incorporation, File incorporation documents (constitution, particulars of directors and secretary, statutory declaration of compliance) with the RGD.
  3. Tax registration, Register with the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) for Tax Identification Number (TIN), corporate income tax, and VAT (if applicable).
  4. Social security registration, Register with the Social Security and National Insurance Trust (SSNIT) for employee contributions.

GIPA Certificate Application, Who Must Apply

Every enterprise with foreign participation, whether a joint venture or wholly foreign-owned, must apply for and obtain a GIPA certificate before commencing business. The application typically requires:

  • Completed GIPA application form
  • Certificate of incorporation and company regulations
  • Evidence of investment capital (bank statements, capital transfer documentation)
  • Business plan or project profile
  • Particulars of directors, shareholders, and beneficial owners
  • Tax clearance certificate from GRA
  • Environmental permits (if applicable to the sector)

Sector Approvals and Permits

Depending on the nature of the investment, additional sector-specific approvals may be required from bodies such as the Minerals Commission (mining), Petroleum Commission (oil and gas), National Communications Authority (telecoms), or the Environmental Protection Agency. These approvals typically run in parallel with or after the GIPA certificate and may impose additional capital, local content, or operational requirements.

Employment and Immigration

Foreign investors bringing in expatriate staff must obtain work and residence permits from the Ghana Immigration Service. The GIPA certificate process includes an automatic expatriate quota (the number depends on the size of the investment), which permits the enterprise to employ a specified number of non-Ghanaian nationals without separate immigration approval for each individual.

Registration Steps Table

Step Responsible Authority Typical Timeframe
1. Name reservation Registrar General’s Department (RGD) 1–3 working days
2. Company incorporation RGD 5–10 working days
3. Tax registration (TIN, CIT, VAT) Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) 5–7 working days
4. SSNIT registration SSNIT 3–5 working days
5. GIPA certificate application Ghana Investment Promotion Authority (GIPA) 5–15 working days (estimated)
6. Sector-specific permits Relevant sector regulator Varies (2–12 weeks depending on sector)
7. Work/residence permits Ghana Immigration Service 10–20 working days

Sectoral Exceptions and Trading-Company Rules

Trading Companies (Retail), Capital Thresholds That May Persist

One of the most frequently asked questions about Ghana investment law 2026 for foreign investors concerns retail trading. Under the GIPC Act, trading enterprises (companies engaged in the purchase and sale of imported goods) faced an elevated minimum capital threshold of USD 1,000,000 and were required to employ at least 20 Ghanaians. The intent was to protect small-scale Ghanaian traders from foreign competition.

While the GIPA Bill removes general minimum capital requirements, industry observers expect that specific capital floors for trading companies will be maintained through subsidiary legislation or regulations made under the new Act. Foreign investors planning to enter the retail or wholesale trading space in Ghana should therefore not assume that the trading-company threshold has been eliminated until the relevant regulations are published. This is a critical red flag for market-entry planning.

Restricted or Strategic Sectors

Certain activities remain reserved exclusively for Ghanaian nationals or are subject to mandatory local participation requirements. These typically include:

  • Petty trading and hawking, reserved for Ghanaians
  • Small-scale mining, restricted to Ghanaian citizens under the Minerals and Mining Act
  • Taxi and car-hire services with fewer than 25 vehicles, reserved
  • Beauty salons and barber shops, reserved
  • Certain professional services, subject to licensing by professional regulatory bodies that may impose nationality requirements

Ghana does, however, permit 100% foreign ownership in most non-reserved sectors, including manufacturing, technology, agriculture, hospitality, and professional services (subject to professional licensing). The foreign ownership rules under Ghana’s 2026 regime remain broadly permissive for strategic and growth-oriented investments.

Tax and Non-Tax Incentives for Foreign Investors in Ghana, Procedure to Secure Benefits

Typical Incentives Available

Ghana offers a range of incentives for foreign investors in Ghana designed to attract capital into priority sectors. Under the GIPA Bill’s updated framework, these incentives include:

  • Tax holidays, Corporate income tax exemptions for specified periods (typically 5–10 years) for enterprises in free zones, agriculture, and agro-processing
  • Customs duty exemptions, Relief on import duties for plant, machinery, and equipment used directly in qualifying investment activities
  • Accelerated capital allowances, Enhanced depreciation deductions for qualifying capital expenditure
  • Free zone benefits, Enterprises operating within Ghana’s free zones enjoy income tax holidays, exemption from withholding taxes on dividends, and duty-free import of raw materials
  • Location incentives, Additional tax rebates for investments located outside Accra and Tema, designed to encourage regional development

How to Apply for Incentives

Under the new regime, incentive applications can be submitted concurrently with the GIPA certificate application. Investors should prepare the following documentation:

Incentive Type Administering Body Application Trigger
Corporate tax holiday Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) / GIPA Concurrent with GIPA registration; sector-specific eligibility confirmed
Customs duty exemption Ghana Revenue Authority / Customs Division Upon import of qualifying equipment; GIPA certificate required
Free zone licence Ghana Free Zones Authority (GFZA) Separate application to GFZA; can run in parallel with GIPA
Location tax rebate GRA At annual tax filing; evidence of operational location outside Accra/Tema
Accelerated depreciation GRA At annual tax filing; supported by capital expenditure documentation

Post-Registration Compliance and Reporting Obligations

Annual Returns, Shareholding Changes, and Reporting Thresholds

Obtaining a GIPA certificate is not the end of the compliance journey. Registered enterprises with foreign participation are subject to ongoing obligations, including:

  • Annual returns to GIPA, Details of operations, employment, investment volumes, and any changes in shareholding structure
  • Annual returns to the Registrar General, Standard company filing obligations including updated particulars of directors and shareholders
  • Tax filings, Corporate income tax returns (annually), VAT returns (monthly), and withholding tax returns (monthly)
  • SSNIT contributions, Monthly employee social security contributions
  • Notification of material changes, Any change in beneficial ownership, registered address, or nature of business must be reported to both GIPA and the RGD

Penalties and Enforcement

Operating without a valid GIPA certificate or failing to comply with reporting obligations carries penalties that may include fines, suspension of investment incentives, and, in serious cases, an order to cease operations. The likely practical effect of the new enforcement provisions will be stricter compliance monitoring, particularly given GIPA’s expanded mandate to track and report on investment outcomes.

Reporting Obligations by Entity Type

Entity Type Key Reporting Obligations Typical Deadlines
Wholly foreign-owned company GIPA annual return, RGD annual return, GRA corporate tax return, monthly VAT/WHT GIPA: within 6 months of financial year end; RGD: annually; GRA: 30 April (CIT); monthly (VAT/WHT)
Joint venture (foreign + Ghanaian) GIPA annual return, RGD annual return, GRA corporate tax return, monthly VAT/WHT, SSNIT contributions Same deadlines as above
Branch of foreign company RGD annual return, GRA corporate tax return, quarterly branch profit reporting RGD: annually; GRA: 30 April; quarterly reporting per GRA schedule
Free zone enterprise GFZA annual report, GIPA registration (if applicable), GRA returns (post-holiday period) GFZA: annually; GRA deadlines apply after tax holiday expires

Risk Mitigation and Practical Tips for Investors

Due Diligence Checklist

  • Local partners. Verify the corporate standing, financial capacity, and litigation history of any proposed Ghanaian partner through Registrar General and court records searches.
  • Land and title. Conduct independent title searches at the Lands Commission. Confirm that the land is not subject to customary claims, encumbrances, or government compulsory acquisition.
  • Regulatory pre-clearance. For regulated sectors, obtain informal pre-clearance from the relevant regulator before committing significant capital.

Contract Drafting Tips

  • Governing law and dispute resolution. Specify Ghanaian governing law where required, but consider international arbitration (LCIA, ICC, or ICSID) for dispute resolution clauses in shareholder or joint venture agreements.
  • Phased capital deployment. With general minimums removed, structure investment agreements to allow phased capital injection tied to operational milestones, protecting downside exposure.
  • Escrow and completion accounts. Use escrow arrangements for asset acquisitions and completion accounts for going-concern purchases to manage valuation risk.

Case Study, Joint Venture vs Wholly Foreign-Owned Company

Scenario A: International manufacturer (JV with Ghanaian partner). A European manufacturer of agricultural inputs seeks to establish a processing facility near Kumasi. Under the old GIPC regime, the foreign investor would have needed to commit at least USD 200,000 in equity at the outset. Under the GIPA Bill 2026, the investor can structure a phased equity commitment of USD 80,000 initially, scaling to USD 300,000 over 18 months as production ramps up. The JV partners file for incorporation at RGD, register with GRA and SSNIT, and apply concurrently for a GIPA certificate and location-based tax incentives. Total timeline from name reservation to GIPA certificate: approximately 4–6 weeks.

Scenario B: Wholly foreign-owned retail entrant. A Middle Eastern consumer goods company seeks to open branded retail stores in Accra. Despite the removal of general minimums, this enterprise falls within the trading company category. Industry observers expect the USD 1,000,000 capital floor and 20-employee requirement for trading enterprises to be maintained via subsidiary regulations. The investor must confirm the applicable threshold with GIPA, prepare evidence of the full capital commitment, and apply for a GIPA certificate with enhanced documentation. Timeline: 6–10 weeks, including sector confirmation. Red flag: commencing retail operations before GIPA certificate issuance exposes the enterprise to penalties and potential closure orders.

Conclusion and Recommended Next Steps

The Ghana Investment Promotion Authority Bill 2026 represents the most investor-friendly reform to Ghana investment law 2026 for foreign investors in over a decade. The removal of general minimum capital thresholds, the streamlined GIPA certificate process, and the concurrent incentives application pathway all reduce friction for market entry. However, sectoral exceptions, the removal of the spouse exemption, and ongoing compliance obligations mean that careful planning remains essential.

Three immediate actions:

  1. Review your existing GIPC registration (or planned investment structure) against the new GIPA requirements and confirm transitional provisions.
  2. Prepare a compliance checklist Ghana investment teams can use, covering GIPA registration, sector approvals, tax filings, and SSNIT obligations.
  3. Engage experienced Ghana-based counsel early to navigate sector-specific capital thresholds, incentive applications, and post-registration reporting.

Last reviewed: 2 May 2026. This guide will be updated within seven days of the publication of the official GIPA Act commencement notice.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Thecla Wricketts at TJWricketts At Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Afriwise, Ghana’s New Investment Promotion Authority Law
  2. ENS Africa, Ghana’s new Investment Promotion Bill: What investors need to know
  3. Mondaq, Ghana’s New Investment Promotion Authority Law
  4. UNCTAD Investment Policy Hub, Ghana Investment Promotion Centre Act
  5. Africa Legal, Reforming Ghana’s Investment Regime (GIPA Bill)
  6. CitiNewsroom, How to register a business in Ghana and what foreign investors must know
  7. Africa Trade Academy, Implications of Ghana’s new investment law for AfCFTA implementation
  8. Ghana Embassy (Berlin), Invest in Ghana

FAQs

Who needs a GIPA certificate under the new law?
Every enterprise with foreign participation, whether a joint venture or wholly foreign-owned, must register with the Ghana Investment Promotion Authority and obtain a GIPA certificate before commencing business operations in Ghana. This requirement applies regardless of the investment size or sector.
The Bill removes general minimum capital requirements (previously USD 200,000 for JVs and USD 500,000 for wholly foreign enterprises), replaces the GIPC with GIPA, eliminates the spouse exemption, and introduces a concurrent incentives application process. Sector-specific thresholds may still apply.
Reserve a company name with the Registrar General’s Department, incorporate the company, register for tax (GRA) and social security (SSNIT), and then apply for a GIPA certificate. The total process typically takes four to eight weeks, depending on the sector and completeness of documentation.
Industry observers expect that sector-specific capital thresholds, particularly for trading (retail) companies, will be maintained via subsidiary legislation under the GIPA Act. Investors should confirm the applicable requirements with GIPA before finalising capital commitments.
Foreign investors can engage in retail trading, but this sector has historically been subject to elevated capital thresholds (USD 1,000,000 under the GIPC Act) and minimum employment requirements (20 Ghanaian employees). These requirements are expected to persist under the new regime. Petty trading and hawking remain reserved exclusively for Ghanaian nationals.
Based on current processing estimates and the experience under the former GIPC regime, a GIPA certificate application is expected to take between 5 and 15 working days once all required documents have been submitted. Complex applications or those involving regulated sectors may take longer.
Operating without a valid GIPA certificate may result in fines, suspension or forfeiture of investment incentives, and orders to cease business operations. The GIPA Bill strengthens enforcement provisions compared to the previous GIPC Act.

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

Newsletter Sign Up
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

What the Ghana Investment Promotion Authority Bill 2026 Means for Foreign Investors, Practical Guide

Send welcome message

Custom Message