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Understanding how to start business in Ghana as a foreigner requires navigating three distinct regulatory layers: company incorporation through the Office of the Registrar of Companies (ORC), investment registration with the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre (GIPC), and compliance with reserved-sector restrictions that limit foreign participation in certain activities. Ghana’s Companies Act, 2019 (Act 992) governs entity formation, while the GIPC Act, 2013 (Act 865) sets the minimum capital thresholds that foreign investors must satisfy before commencing operations. With the ORC portal now supporting Ghana business registration online and legislative discussions around the proposed Ghana Investment Promotion Authority (GIPA) Bill potentially reshaping capital rules, 2026 is a pivotal year for foreign founders evaluating market entry.
Yes, foreigners can legally own and operate companies in Ghana, including holding 100 per cent of the shares in a locally incorporated entity. There is no blanket prohibition on foreign ownership, but the law imposes two important conditions that every incoming investor must address early.
The sections below walk through each step in sequence: choosing the right entity, incorporating with ORC, satisfying GIPC capital requirements, checking reserved activities, obtaining licences and permits, and meeting ongoing compliance obligations.
The entity structure you select determines your registration pathway, minimum capital obligations, tax residence status, and reporting burden. Most foreign investors incorporate a private company limited by shares (Ltd), but alternatives exist depending on project scope and duration.
A private company limited by shares under the Companies Act, 2019 (Act 992) is the most common vehicle for foreign direct investment. It requires a minimum of one director and one shareholder, must maintain a registered office in Ghana, and needs at least one director who is ordinarily resident in Ghana. The company is a separate legal person, limiting shareholder liability to their capital contribution. Incorporation fees payable to ORC depend on the stated capital of the company.
An external company in Ghana is a body corporate formed outside Ghana that establishes a place of business or carries on business within the country. Under Act 992, such an entity must register with ORC within 28 days of establishing its local presence. An external company does not create a new Ghanaian legal person, it operates as a branch of the parent. This structure suits project-based operations, short-term contracts, or situations where the parent entity needs to retain direct operational control. However, the branch is still subject to Ghanaian tax on its locally sourced income and must appoint a local representative authorised to accept service of process.
| Entity type | Minimum local director | GIPC trigger | Typical use case |
|---|---|---|---|
| Private limited company (Ltd) | At least one resident director | Yes, foreign shareholding triggers registration and capital requirements | Long-term trading, manufacturing, services, holding structure |
| External company (branch) | Local representative required | May be triggered depending on the nature and scale of operations | Project-based work, construction contracts, exploration |
| Representative office | Local contact person | Generally limited, no trading permitted | Market research, liaison, pre-investment feasibility |
| Sole proprietorship | N/A (individual registration) | Not available to non-Ghanaians for most activities | Not recommended for foreign investors |
If you plan to trade locally, manufacture goods, or provide services in Ghana on an ongoing basis, a private limited company is almost always the preferred vehicle. If the engagement is time-limited or project-specific, registering an external company in Ghana may be more efficient, though tax treatment and GIPC obligations must still be assessed.
Company registration in Ghana requirements are administered by the Office of the Registrar of Companies (ORC), which operates under the Registrar-General’s Department (RGD). The ORC portal supports Ghana business registration online, allowing applicants to complete much of the process electronically.
Foreign shareholders who are not physically present in Ghana at the time of incorporation can execute a power of attorney in favour of a local representative or legal counsel to handle filing on their behalf. This power of attorney should be notarised in the shareholder’s country of residence and, where required, apostilled. Opening a corporate bank account typically requires the Certificate of Incorporation, the company constitution, board resolutions, and completed bank know-your-customer (KYC) forms, begin the bank’s onboarding process in parallel with incorporation to avoid delays.
Every enterprise with foreign participation must register with the GIPC under the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre Act, 2013 (Act 865), before commencing business operations. This is not optional, it is a statutory prerequisite. The GIPC registration requirements include satisfying minimum equity capital thresholds, which vary by ownership structure and business activity.
The minimum capital for foreign companies in Ghana, as prescribed by Section 28 of Act 865, applies as follows:
| Category | Minimum equity capital (USD) | Notes and exemptions |
|---|---|---|
| Joint venture (Ghanaian partner holds ≥10%) | USD 200,000 | Must demonstrate that the Ghanaian partner’s contribution is genuine and verifiable |
| Wholly foreign-owned enterprise (non-trading) | USD 500,000 | Applies to manufacturing, services, and other non-trading activities |
| Trading enterprise (wholly or partly foreign-owned) | USD 1,000,000 | Trading includes buying and selling of imported goods; the highest threshold reflects the policy to protect local traders |
Capital must be brought into Ghana through the banking system and evidenced by a bank certificate or capital importation certificate. The capital can take the form of foreign exchange, plant and machinery, equipment, or any combination as approved by GIPC. Portfolio investments and certain enterprises operating under specific sector legislation (such as mining under the Minerals and Mining Act or petroleum under the Petroleum (Exploration and Production) Act) are governed by their own regulatory regimes and are generally exempt from the GIPC capital requirements.
To complete GIPC registration, the applicant must submit:
Upon successful registration, GIPC issues an Investment Certificate. This certificate is often required by banks, immigration authorities (for work permit processing), and sector regulators as proof that the foreign investment has been properly registered.
The proposed Ghana Investment Promotion Authority (GIPA) Bill, which has been the subject of recent parliamentary discussion, may revise capital thresholds, adjust the reserved activities list, or restructure the regulatory body itself. Industry observers expect that any enacted changes could lower or raise specific thresholds and introduce new incentive categories. Foreign investors should monitor parliamentary progress closely and seek updated advice before finalising their capital structuring. Until the Bill is enacted, the thresholds in Act 865 remain in force.
Not every business activity is open to foreign investors. The GIPC Act, 2013 (Act 865) designates certain activities as reserved exclusively for Ghanaian citizens. Operating in a reserved activity without authorisation can result in penalties, forced divestiture, or refusal of GIPC registration.
Reserved activities Ghana has historically restricted for foreign participation include:
This list is not exhaustive, and sector-specific legislation may impose additional restrictions. For example, mining and petroleum sectors have their own foreign participation rules under separate Acts.
Choosing between registering an external company in Ghana (branch) and incorporating a local subsidiary (Ltd) is one of the most consequential early decisions. The table below summarises the core differences.
| Entity type | Reporting & tax implications | Typical capital & setup notes |
|---|---|---|
| Local subsidiary (Ltd) | Tax resident in Ghana; subject to standard Corporate Income Tax (CIT), VAT, and PAYE withholding; must file annual returns with ORC and GRA; transfer pricing rules apply to related-party transactions | Standard incorporation via ORC; GIPC registration required if foreign participation triggers apply; provides maximum flexibility for local operations, contracts, and financing |
| External company (branch) | Branch profits sourced in Ghana are taxed locally; must file local accounts and register with ORC; required to appoint a local representative agent; transfer pricing exposure on inter-company charges | No separate legal personality, parent bears full liability; simpler for short-term or project-based operations; may still trigger GIPC capital requirements depending on investment structure |
| Representative office | Limited to liaison activities; not permitted to carry on trading; restricted tax status, generally not subject to CIT on local income as no trading occurs | No trading allowed; easiest to set up but strictly limited in commercial activity; useful for market research and pre-investment feasibility phases |
For most foreign investors planning substantive, long-term operations in Ghana, a locally incorporated subsidiary offers the greatest operational flexibility, clearest GIPC compliance pathway, and strongest legal separation from the parent entity. A branch structure is typically favoured for construction contracts, infrastructure projects, or extractive industry operations with defined end dates.
Incorporation and GIPC registration are necessary but not sufficient. Depending on the nature of the business, additional licences, permits, and employment-related registrations must be obtained before the company can lawfully commence operations.
Foreign nationals intending to work in Ghana must obtain a work permit from the Ghana Immigration Service. The employer applies on behalf of the employee, and the process typically requires the GIPC Investment Certificate, the employee’s passport, educational and professional qualifications, a medical report, and evidence that the position cannot be filled by a Ghanaian national. Processing timelines vary but generally range from four to eight weeks.
All employers, regardless of the nationality of their workforce, must register with the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) for Tax Identification Numbers and PAYE, and with the Social Security and National Insurance Trust (SSNIT) for employee pension contributions. These registrations should be completed within the first month of commencing business. Sector-specific licences, such as environmental permits from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), food and drug approvals from the Food and Drugs Authority (FDA), or telecommunications licences from the NCA, must be identified and obtained before operations begin in regulated sectors.
How much does it cost to register a company in Ghana? Public filing fees are relatively modest, but the total investment includes GIPC capital, professional fees, and licensing costs.
| Item | Typical cost range (USD) | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| ORC name reservation | $10 – $25 | 1 – 3 business days |
| ORC incorporation fees (varies by stated capital) | $50 – $500 | 3 – 5 business days |
| GIPC registration fee | $500 – $2,000 | 2 – 4 weeks |
| GIPC minimum equity capital (varies by category) | $200,000 – $1,000,000 | Must be in place before or at time of GIPC registration |
| Legal and advisory fees (incorporation + GIPC) | $2,000 – $8,000 | Concurrent with filing |
| Corporate bank account opening | $0 – $200 (bank charges vary) | 1 – 3 weeks |
| Work permit (per foreign employee) | $500 – $2,000 | 4 – 8 weeks |
| Business operating permit (MMDA) | $50 – $500 (varies by district and activity) | 1 – 2 weeks |
End-to-end, a straightforward incorporation with GIPC registration typically takes six to ten weeks from name reservation to Investment Certificate issuance. Complex structures, sector-specific licences, or delays in capital importation can extend this timeline.
Once the company is incorporated and GIPC-registered, the following ongoing compliance obligations apply:
Foreign investors entering Ghana face several recurring risks that are avoidable with proper planning:
Use this checklist to track each step of the market-entry process in sequence:
Knowing how to start business in Ghana as a foreigner in 2026 means working through a clear but layered process: select the right entity, incorporate through ORC, satisfy GIPC capital thresholds, confirm that your planned activity is not reserved, and meet post-incorporation tax and employment obligations. Each step has specific documentation requirements and statutory deadlines. With the GIPA Bill under consideration, the regulatory landscape may shift, making up-to-date legal guidance essential. For tailored advice on structuring your Ghana market entry, consult a qualified foreign investment lawyer through the Global Law Experts directory.
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.
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