Ghana Gold Export Procedure: The Complete Guide 2026

Ghana Gold Export Procedure: Ghana — the nation historically known as the Gold Coast — is Africa’s largest gold producer and one of the world’s most important sources of certified, investment-grade gold.

In 2024, Ghana produced over 140 metric tonnes of gold, contributing to annual export revenues that reached $1.71 billion in a single quarter of 2023 alone.

Gold accounts for approximately 48% of Ghana’s total mineral revenue through royalties, taxes, and corporate earnings, making it the undisputed centrepiece of the country’s economy.

In 2026, the Ghana gold export procedure has fundamentally changed. The enactment of the Ghana Gold Board Act (Act 1140) on 2 April 2025 — signed into law by President Mahama — established the Ghana Gold Board (GoldBod) as the sole legal buyer, assayer, and exporter of gold produced by Ghana’s Artisanal and Small-Scale Mining (ASM) sector.

Every licence previously issued by PMMC or the Minister responsible for Mines to deal in gold ceased to be valid as of 1 May 2025. For exporters and international buyers operating in 2026, navigating Ghana’s new gold export regulations without understanding GoldBod’s role is not just inefficient — it is a criminal offence.

This guide provides the most complete and current step-by-step Ghana gold export procedure for 2026 — covering every institution, every document, every cost, every legal requirement, and the critical changes brought by GoldBod that every Licensed Gold Exporter (LGE) and international buyer must understand before conducting any transaction involving exporting gold from Ghana.

INDUSTRY OVERVIEW

Overview of Ghana’s Gold Export Industry in 2026 — Production, Market Size and the GoldBod Revolution

Ghana’s gold export industry is built on three interconnected pillars: large-scale industrial mining by multinationals including Newmont (Ahafo, Akyem), Gold Fields (Tarkwa, Damang), and AngloGold Ashanti (Obuasi); small-scale and artisanal mining concentrated in the Ashanti, Western, and Eastern regions; and a licensed export and trading network through which gold moves from mine to international market.

Understanding which pillar your transaction sits within is the first step to understanding which Ghana gold export regulations apply to you.

The Minerals and Mining Act, 2006 (Act 703) and the Minerals and Mining (General) Regulations, 2012 (L.I. 2173) remain the foundational legislative framework governing all aspects of gold mining and export.

Layered on top of this in 2025 is the Ghana Gold Board Act (Act 1140) — which applies specifically to ASM gold and represents the most significant reform of Ghana’s gold trading regime in 35 years. In 2026, all ASM gold export from Ghana must flow through GoldBod.

Large-scale mining companies operating under valid mining leases may still export their own production directly, provided they comply with Act 703 and Ghana’s Local Content Regulations (L.I. 2431).

The driver behind this transformation is straightforward: decades of informal gold trading had allowed thousands of small-scale miners to sell gold outside regulated systems, costing Ghana billions in lost export revenue.

By centralising all ASM gold sales through GoldBod, requiring proceeds to return through the Bank of Ghana, and mandating AML/KYC compliance for all transactions, Ghana’s government is reclaiming value from its most important natural resource — and making Ghanaian gold more credible in global markets that increasingly demand traceability and ethical supply chain documentation.

GOLDBOD EXPLAINED

The Ghana Gold Board (GoldBod) in 2026 — What Every Gold Buyer and Exporter Must Know About Act 1140

The Ghana Gold Board (GoldBod) is the statutory body established under the Ghana Gold Board Act (Act 1140), 2025 to oversee, manage, and undertake the buying, selling, assaying, refining, and exportation of gold produced by Ghana’s ASM sector.

GoldBod is not merely a replacement for PMMC — it has far broader powers. Unlike PMMC, GoldBod has the sole authority to export ASM gold from Ghana, the sole authority for grading, assaying, and valuing all gold produced into or exported from Ghana, and broad inspection and enforcement powers including the ability to seize gold, suspend licences, and close operations.

What GoldBod Means for Foreign Buyers in 2026

As of 1 May 2025, all foreigners were required to exit Ghana’s local gold trading market. This does not mean foreign buyers are excluded from Ghana’s gold market — but it fundamentally changes how they must engage. In 2026, foreign buyers have three legal pathways to access Ghanaian gold:

  1. Apply for a GoldBod export licence(available from 22 April 2025): Foreign companies may apply to GoldBod to purchase or off-take gold directly from the Board under a licensed off-taker agreement.
  2. Register as a GoldBod-authorised off-taker: Purchase certified gold directly from GoldBod’s aggregated pool, with full documentation package and LBMA-compatible certification.
  3. Form a joint venture with a GoldBod-licensed Ghanaian aggregator: Partner with a wholly Ghanaian-owned company that holds a valid GoldBod licence, with the foreign party operating as a financier or off-taker rather than a direct purchaser.
CRITICAL: Exporting ASM Gold Without GoldBod Authorisation Is a Criminal Offence in 2026

Under the Ghana Gold Board Act (Act 1140), exporting ASM gold from Ghana outside the GoldBod system is now a criminal offence carrying penalties that include confiscation of goods, substantial fines, suspension of licences, and criminal prosecution.

All licences previously issued by PMMC or the Minister responsible for Mines ceased to be valid on 1 May 2025. Operating under a PMMC licence in 2026 is illegal. Buyers must verify that any Ghanaian seller holds a current, valid GoldBod licence — not a historic PMMC licence — before entering any gold purchase agreement. The GoldBod licence register is publicly accessible at goldbod.gov.gh.

STEP-BY-STEP PROCEDURE

The Ghana Gold Export Procedure in 2026 — Complete Step-by-Step Guide for Licensed Exporters

The Ghana gold export procedure for Licensed Gold Exporters (LGEs) in 2026 involves eight sequential steps, each with specific documentation, fees, and institutional touchpoints. Skipping or shortcutting any step is not just procedurally problematic — it constitutes a regulatory violation. Here is the complete process:

Step 1   Obtain a GoldBod-Compliant Gold Export Licence

Any individual or company intending to export gold from Ghana in 2026 must hold a valid licence issued by GoldBod under Act 1140. All licences previously issued by PMMC or the Ministry of Lands and Natural Resources have ceased to be valid.

Process: Incorporate a company in Ghana; register with the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre (GIPC); obtain a Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN) or GhanaCard PIN from the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA); register with the Ghana Export Promotion Authority (GEPA) to obtain an exporter number; and apply to GoldBod for a gold buying and export licence. GoldBod reviews technical and financial capability before granting approval.

Licence validity: Export licences are valid for three years and renewable upon application. The Minerals Commission evaluates documentation and compliance for renewals.

Cost: Licensing fees of approximately $5,000–$10,000 annually; specific current fees are available from GoldBod at goldbod.gov.gh.

Foreign entities: Must apply as GoldBod-registered off-takers or joint venture partners with Ghanaian aggregators. Direct purchasing licences under Section 28 of Act 1140 are available only to Ghanaian citizens and wholly Ghanaian-owned companies.

Step 2   Notify GoldBod of the Planned Export Transaction

LGEs must notify GoldBod in writing of their planned export at least two working days before the scheduled weekly export. The notification must include the full address and telephone number of the overseas consignee.

As of 2026, all ASM gold exports must be channelled through GoldBod’s aggregation and export system. GoldBod coordinates the logistics to Kotoka International Airport (KIA) in Accra, Ghana’s primary gold export hub.

Large-scale mining companies with valid mining leases must provide equivalent advance notification to GoldBod and the Minerals Commission under separate Large-Scale Mining Export protocols.

Step 3   Submit Gold for Independent Assay and Valuation

The gold must be submitted to GoldBod’s designated assay centre along with all export declaration documents, packing lists, and invoices. GoldBod holds the sole authority for grading, assaying, and valuing all gold produced into or exported from Ghana under Act 1140.

The assay process determines the gold’s purity (fineness) and weight (in troy ounces and kilograms) using agreed methods including fire assay, XRF scanning, or ICP analysis for multi-metal lots.

A formal assay report is prepared and simultaneously issued to the Bank of Ghana (BOG), the GRA Customs Officer stationed at the assay centre, and the Minerals Commission.

Assay fee: 0.1% of the value of the gold assayed, payable to GoldBod. This is separate from any administrative fee charged by the Minerals Commission.

Assay turnaround: Typically 24–48 hours for standard karat gold; 3–5 days for complex multi-metal lots.

Step 4   Pay All Government Taxes, Royalties and Export Levies

Before any export permit is issued, all applicable government charges must be paid and evidenced with official receipts. These receipts form part of the mandatory export documentation package.

The 5% royalty is levied on the LBMA spot price on the day of export. The 3% withholding tax on small-scale miners’ output was abolished in 2025 under the GoldBod reform. An export levy of 1–3% for administrative costs may apply depending on shipment type. Customs processing fees of approximately $500 per shipment are standard.

Transactions must be conducted in Ghanaian cedis (GHS) as mandated under the GoldBod Act. Payment for exported gold must be repatriated through GoldBod’s USD account with the Bank of Ghana, based on the London AM Gold Fix on the day of shipment.

Step 5   Sealing and Customs Inspection by GRA

Following assay and tax payment, the gold is physically inspected and sealed by a Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) Customs Official at the assay centre. The Customs Officer uses the GRA Customs Division’s official seal and endorses the Customs Declaration Form.

Gold cannot legally be exported from Ghana without both the GRA Customs Division seal and the GoldBod assay certification seal. Any shipment missing either is illegal under Act 1140 and Act 703.

At the sealing stage, the gold is packed into sealed metal or wooden specie boxes in the presence of GoldBod representatives, the GRA Customs Officer, and the LGE’s authorised agent. Once sealed, the parcel cannot be opened again within Ghana.

Step 6   Compile the Full Export Documentation Package

A complete and accurate documentation package is the single most common point of failure in Ghana gold export transactions. Missing or incomplete documents cause shipment delays, customs seizures, and in severe cases, criminal investigation.

The mandatory Ghana gold export documentation package for 2026 includes: (1) GoldBod Export Permit; (2) Minerals Commission Export Licence confirmation; (3) GoldBod Assay Report (purity, weight in oz and kg, USD value at LBMA AM Fix); (4) Certificate of Origin; (5) Bank of Ghana Exchange Control Form A2; (6) GRA Customs Declaration Form (endorsed); (7) Commercial Invoice; (8) Packing List; (9) Kimberley Process Certificate (where applicable); (10) Sales and Purchase Agreement (SPA); (11) AML/KYC compliance documentation; (12) Insurance Certificate; (13) Environmental Compliance Certificate (EPA) for mining-related activities.

Step 7   Transportation to Kotoka International Airport (KIA)

The sealed gold consignment is transported to Kotoka International Airport (KIA) in Accra — Ghana’s sole major international gold export hub. The LGE nominates a carrier and provides flight details to GoldBod at least 24 hours before export.

Transportation from the assay centre to KIA uses GoldBod-coordinated or GRA-approved armoured vehicles. Companies such as Brinks and Malca-Amit provide the international logistics standard for precious metals transport from KIA to global destinations.

Insurance and airfreight charges are borne by the exporter or consignee and vary by shipment size and destination. Always insure at 101% of declared gold value with all-risk precious metals coverage. Standard carrier insurance caps at $100 — inadequate for any significant gold consignment.

Step 8   Final Documentation at KIA and International Clearance

At KIA, the LGE’s authorised agent completes final documentation including the Air Waybill (AWB) confirming routing, weight, declared value, and recipient details. All export permits and customs forms are verified against the physical shipment before departure clearance is given.

Export proceeds must be repatriated to Ghana through GoldBod’s Bank of Ghana USD account within the timeframe specified in the export permit. Monthly returns must be submitted to the Minerals Commission by all LGEs, detailing export quantities, values, and compliance status in line with licence agreement terms.

Primary international routes from KIA: to Switzerland (Geneva/Zurich), UAE (Dubai), India (Mumbai), UK (London Heathrow), South Africa (Johannesburg). Transit via Ethiopian Airlines, Emirates, or British Airways cargo is standard.

Understanding Gold Purity

KEY INSTITUTIONS

Key Regulatory Institutions in Ghana’s Gold Export Framework — 2026

Understanding which institution plays which role in the Ghana gold export process is essential for anyone seeking to export gold from Ghana legally. Here is the complete institutional map for 2026:

Table 1 — Ghana Gold Export Institutions and Their Roles (2026)

InstitutionPrimary Role in Gold ExportKey 2026 Function
Ghana Gold Board (GoldBod)Sole buyer, assayer, and exporter of ASM gold under Act 1140Issues GoldBod licences; runs assay centres; manages aggregation and export of all small-scale gold; enforces anti-smuggling measures
Minerals CommissionOversees licensing and regulatory compliance; issues LGE mining and export licences for large-scale operatorsReviews licence applications; monitors LGE monthly returns; co-ordinates with GoldBod on compliance
Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) — Customs DivisionInspects and seals gold consignments; endorses Customs Declaration Forms; enforces tax and royalty paymentsPhysical inspection at assay centre; GRA seal on all consignments; stationed officer at GoldBod assay centre
Bank of Ghana (BOG)Oversees foreign exchange repatriation of gold export proceeds; issues Exchange Control Form A2All export proceeds must be repatriated through BOG via GoldBod’s USD account
Ghana Export Promotion Authority (GEPA)Issues exporter registration numbers; supports export market developmentAll gold exporters must register with GEPA before applying for a GoldBod or Minerals Commission licence
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)Issues Environmental Compliance Certificates for mining-related activitiesEPA compliance certificate required as part of the export documentation package
Kotoka International Airport (KIA)Primary physical exit point for all gold exports from GhanaFinal documentation checks; airline carrier coordination; GRA final clearance before departure
Source: Ghana Gold Board Act (Act 1140), 2025; Minerals and Mining Act (Act 703), 2006; Ghana Consulate Guidance Note on Gold Export (2025). In 2026, GoldBod is the first point of contact for any entity seeking to export ASM gold from Ghana.

COSTS AND TAXES

Ghana Gold Export Costs, Taxes and Fees in 2026 — Complete Financial Breakdown

One of the most important inputs to any Ghana gold export financial model is a complete and accurate understanding of all applicable taxes, royalties, fees, and ancillary costs. Here is the comprehensive cost breakdown for exporting gold from Ghana in 2026, updated for GoldBod-era regulations:

Table 2 — Complete Ghana Gold Export Costs and Taxes (2026)

Cost ComponentRate / AmountBasisNotes for Exporters
Gold Royalty5% ad valoremLBMA spot price on export dayPrimary government charge; payable before export permit issued. May rise to 10% under future reforms.
Export Administrative Levy1–3%Gold valueGoldBod/Minerals Commission administrative charge for aggregation and processing services.
Withholding Tax on ASM goldAbolished 2025N/A (previously 3%)Removed under GoldBod reform. No longer applicable for ASM gold routed through GoldBod system.
GoldBod Assay Fee0.1% of assayed valueGold value at assayPayable to GoldBod at assay centre. Separate from Minerals Commission administrative fees.
GoldBod / Minerals Commission Licence Fee$5,000–$10,000 per yearAnnualRequired before any gold export activity can commence. Exact fee obtained from GoldBod at goldbod.gov.gh.
GRA Customs Processing Fee~$500 per shipmentPer exportCovers GRA officer time at assay centre and KIA. Varies by shipment complexity.
Airfreight (KIA to destination)$800–$3,000+ per shipmentWeight / destinationExporter’s or consignee’s responsibility. Higher for UAE/India than Europe.
Cargo Insurance~0.5–1% of declared valueGold declared valueAll-risk precious metals policy via Brinks or Malca-Amit. Mandatory for international shipment.
Corporate TaxStandard Ghana corporate rateCompany profitExporters must file corporate returns with GRA annually.
GEPA RegistrationVariableOne-time / annualExporter registration fee with Ghana Export Promotion Authority.
— TOTAL EFFECTIVE COST (excl. gold price)6–10% of gold valuePer shipmentPlus fixed fees. For a $1M shipment: $60,000–$100,000 in taxes and charges before logistics.
Ghana gold export charges total approximately 6–10% of gold value for a standard 2026 transaction. Large-volume exporters may negotiate incentives with GoldBod. The 2025 abolition of the 3% withholding tax on ASM gold reduces cost vs. previous regime. Contact buygoldbarsafrica.com for a personalised transaction cost model.

Table 3 — Gold Price Per Kilogram in Ghana vs. Global Markets (2026 Reference)

PurityGhana Price/g (USD)Ghana Price/kg (USD)Global Spot (LBMA)Effective Saving vs. Spot
24K (99.99%)$107–$108$107,000–$108,000~$117–$120/g$9–$13 per gram (8–11% saving)
22K (91.6%)$98–$100$98,000–$100,000~$107–$110/g$9–$10 per gram (8–10% saving)
21K (87.5%)$94–$96$94,000–$96,000~$102–$105/g$7–$9 per gram (7–8% saving)
18K (75%)$80–$82$80,000–$82,000~$88–$90/g$7–$8 per gram (8% saving)
Ghana gold prices reflect GoldBod-channel pricing with 1–3% premium over LBMA spot plus applicable royalties and levies. Net saving after all export costs vs. global retail is 3–7% per kilogram. Source: LBMA, GoldBod aggregation pricing, buygoldbarsafrica.com.

DOCUMENTATION

Complete Ghana Gold Export Documentation Checklist for 2026 — Every Document You Need

Missing documentation is the most common cause of shipment delays, customs seizures, and export denials in Ghana. The complete Ghana gold export documentation package for 2026 comprises thirteen mandatory documents. Prepare all of these before submitting to GoldBod for export clearance:

Table 4 — Ghana Gold Export Documentation Requirements 2026

#DocumentIssued ByPurpose
1GoldBod Export PermitGhana Gold Board (GoldBod)Primary legal authorisation for the export under Act 1140. Non-negotiable.
2Minerals Commission Licence (LGE)Minerals Commission of GhanaConfirms the exporter’s standing as a Licensed Gold Exporter.
3GoldBod Assay ReportGoldBod Assay CentreStates purity (fineness), weight in oz and kg, USD value at LBMA AM Fix. Issued simultaneously to BOG, GRA, and Minerals Commission.
4Certificate of OriginMinerals Commission / GoldBodConfirms Ghanaian provenance. Required by most destination countries for customs clearance.
5Bank of Ghana Exchange Control Form A2Bank of Ghana (via exporter’s bank)Required under Ghana’s Foreign Exchange Act (Act 723) for all export proceeds to be repatriated.
6GRA Customs Declaration FormGhana Revenue Authority (GRA)Endorsed by GRA Customs Officer at assay centre; must match commercial invoice exactly.
7Commercial InvoiceLGE / ExporterFull transaction details: buyer, seller, quantity, purity, declared USD value, payment terms.
8Packing ListLGE / ExporterSpecifies contents of each sealed specie box — must match assay report and invoice precisely.
9Sales & Purchase Agreement (SPA)Buyer and SellerNotarised contract specifying all transaction terms, dispute resolution, and delivery conditions.
10Kimberley Process CertificateGoldBod / Minerals CommissionConfirms conflict-free status. Required by many international import jurisdictions, particularly the EU.
11AML / KYC Compliance PackageLGE / ExporterConfirms transaction compliance with Anti-Money Laundering Act (Act 1044, 2020). Must cover buyer and seller.
12Environmental Compliance CertificateEnvironmental Protection Agency (EPA)Required for mining-related export activities under Ghana’s Environmental Assessment Regulations.
13Air Waybill (AWB) + Insurance CertificateAirline carrier / Brinks or Malca-AmitShipping document confirming routing, declared value, insurance, and recipient. Required at KIA before departure.
All 13 documents must be present, accurate, and cross-referencing before the sealed gold parcel is cleared for international departure at KIA. Discrepancies between any two documents trigger automatic review and potential shipment hold.

 

Gold Export Procedures in Africa

CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES

Challenges, Risks and Opportunities in Ghana’s Gold Export Market in 2026

Key Challenges Facing Ghana Gold Exporters in 2026

Gold smuggling remains Ghana’s most persistent challenge. The GoldBod Act was specifically designed to curb the estimated billions of dollars of Ghanaian gold leaving the country informally every year.

In 2026, GoldBod’s enforcement powers — including the ability to appoint inspectors equivalent to police officers, conduct searches, seize gold, and close operations — are being actively deployed.

For compliant exporters, this creates a more level playing field; for non-compliant operators, the risks have never been higher.

Regulatory transition complexity is a real operational challenge in 2026. Exporters who built their Ghana gold business under the PMMC regime face a full re-licensing process under GoldBod, with new compliance obligations, updated documentation requirements, and changed payment channels.

The abolition of the withholding tax on ASM gold reduces one cost, but the new GoldBod licensing fees and aggregation levy introduce others. Careful financial modelling before committing to a Ghana gold export operation is essential.

Scam risk targeting foreign investors is a persistent feature of Ghana’s gold market. Unlicensed entities posing as Licensed Gold Exporters, fake GoldBod documentation, and advance-fee fraud are all documented patterns that cost foreign buyers millions annually.

In 2026, the correct verification route is direct confirmation of the seller’s GoldBod licence number at goldbod.gov.gh — not reliance on photocopied documents provided by the seller.

Investment Opportunities in Ghana’s Gold Sector in 2026

Local refining is the most significant opportunity created by the GoldBod era. GoldBod’s mandate includes boosting local gold refining to capture value-addition on-continent.

Investors who establish or partner with Ghana-based refinery operations gain preferential access to GoldBod’s aggregated gold supply at competitive prices.

Ghana’s gold is sought after in Switzerland, India, South Africa, and the UAE — with internationally recognised quality and increasingly robust traceability documentation making it premium material in ESG-conscious markets.

High gold prices in 2025–2026 — with gold above $4,000 per troy ounce heading into early 2026 — amplify the value of every tonne produced and exported from Ghana.

Ghana’s annual output of 140+ tonnes translates to approximately $18 billion of gold at 2026 prices — a market of substantial scale for any exporter or investor positioned within it.

Investing in Ghana’s gold export sector in 2026, with the right GoldBod-compliant structure, offers compelling returns for patient, regulation-aware investors.

DUE DILIGENCE AND AML

Due Diligence and Anti-Money Laundering Compliance for Ghana Gold Exports in 2026

Ghana’s Anti-Money Laundering Act (Act 1044, 2020) applies to all gold export transactions. In 2026, under GoldBod’s regime, AML and KYC compliance is not optional — it is a prerequisite for licence issuance and a condition of every individual export permit. Here is what due diligence requires from both sellers and buyers in the Ghana gold market:

  • Verify GoldBod licence status: Confirm the seller’s current GoldBod licence number directly at goldbod.gov.gh. Ask for the licence certificate and cross-reference the number. Do not accept photocopied PMMC licences — these expired on 1 May 2025.
  • Confirm gold origin (ASM vs. large-scale): ASM gold can only be sold and exported via GoldBod. Large-scale mining company gold may be exported directly by the mine under valid mining lease authorisation. Understanding which category your gold falls into determines the correct legal pathway.
  • Complete buyer-side KYC: Provide your company registration documents, passport, proof of address, source-of-funds declaration, and intended use of the gold to GoldBod before any purchase agreement is signed. Bank compliance departments require equivalent documentation before processing international payment transfers.
  • Structure contracts for Bank of Ghana FX compliance: Under Ghana’s Foreign Exchange Act (Act 723), export proceeds must be repatriated through a Ghanaian bank. Contracts should specify that payment terms comply with BOG repatriation rules, with proceeds flowing through GoldBod’s Bank of Ghana USD account.
  • Engage Ghana-qualified legal representation: The Ghana Consulate explicitly recommends engaging legal firms with expertise in Ghana’s mining laws — such as Legalstone Solicitors LLP or Clinton Consultancy — before entering any gold export agreement. This protects against scams, regulatory non-compliance, and contractual exposure.
“Do not engage individuals or entities offering shortcuts, personal accounts, or deals outside of GoldBod, Minerals Commission, or Bank of Ghana channels. Every shortcut in Ghana’s gold market is either illegal, fraudulent, or both. The process is clear; the compliance is achievable; the rewards are substantial. But only if you follow the law.”

— Ghana Consulate — Guidance Note on Gold Export 2025

PRACTICAL TIPS

Practical Tips for a Smooth and Compliant Ghana Gold Export in 2026

The following practical tips come from exporters and legal advisers who have navigated the Ghana gold export procedure before and after the GoldBod transition:

  • Start the licensing process early.GoldBod licence applications are processed sequentially and can take 4–8 weeks for new applicants. Budget at least three months from initial application to first lawful export.
  • Never advance funds without a signed, notarised SPA.The most common fraud vector in Ghana’s gold market is the advance payment before documentation. Use escrow: 30% upfront upon assay confirmation, 70% upon GoldBod export permit issuance.
  • Monitor the LBMA AM Fix daily.Ghana gold is priced on the London AM Gold Fix on the day of shipment. A 24-hour difference in shipment date can change the declared value — and therefore your total royalty and assay fee liability — meaningfully at current price levels.
  • Separate your ASM and large-scale gold clearly.If you are dealing with gold from multiple sources, maintain strict separation between ASM gold (which must go through GoldBod) and large-scale mining company gold (which may be exported directly under a valid mining lease). Mixing these streams creates serious compliance exposure.
  • Submit monthly returns on time.LGEs are required to submit monthly reports to the Minerals Commission detailing export activities. Failure to submit is grounds for licence suspension under both Act 703 and Act 1140.
  • Use specialist precious metals logistics.Brinks and Malca-Amit are the international gold transport standard. Do not use general freight forwarders for gold shipments — they lack the customs documentation expertise, declared-value insurance capability, and armoured handling required.
  • Insure at 101% of declared value.Standard carrier insurance caps at $100. Precious metals all-risk insurance from Brinks covers the full declared value of your consignment from the assay centre to international delivery. Never compromise on this.

YOUR TRUSTED GHANA GOLD PARTNER

Export Ghana Gold Legally and Profitably With Buy Gold Bars Africa Limited

Exporting gold from Ghana in 2026 is a lucrative business — but only if it is done correctly, with full GoldBod compliance, complete documentation, verified sourcing, and professional logistics. The Ghana gold export procedure is structured, predictable, and navigable.

But the cost of navigating it incorrectly — seized shipments, criminal charges, lost funds, licence revocation — is far higher than the cost of doing it right.

Buy Gold Bars Africa Limited is a licensed gold exporter with deep expertise in Ghana’s gold market, including full compliance with the Ghana Gold Board Act (Act 1140) and GoldBod’s 2026 licensing regime.

We work directly with GoldBod-registered aggregators and large-scale mining operations in Ghana to source certified 24K gold bars, gold nuggets, and gold dust with the complete documentation package that international buyers require.

Whether you are a foreign buyer seeking GoldBod-compliant off-take from Ghana, a jewellery manufacturer sourcing high-purity 22K Ghanaian gold, or an institution looking to establish a long-term Ghana gold supply agreement, Buy Gold Bars Africa Limited provides the licensed infrastructure, regulatory expertise, and operational capability to serve you.

Why Buy Gold from Ghana with Buy Gold Bars Africa Limited:

✓  GoldBod-compliant sourcing — all ASM gold purchased and exported through GoldBod’s authorised channels

✓  24K gold at 99.99% purity — GoldBod-assay certified with LBMA-compatible documentation

✓  Transparent pricing at 1–3% above LBMA AM Fix — 10–15% below retail gold channels in Europe and the UAE

✓  Full 13-document export package prepared as standard — no surprises at customs

✓  30/70 escrow-protected payment: 30% on assay confirmation, 70% on GoldBod export permit issuance

✓  Insured Brinks air freight from KIA (Accra) to USA, UK, UAE, Switzerland, India, Singapore

✓  Full refund guarantee if gold fails third-party purity assay on arrival at destination

✓  Legal representation coordination with GoldBod-familiar Ghanaian legal firms available

✓  Monthly reporting compliance managed on your behalf — zero administrative burden

 

Website: buygoldbarsafrica.com  |  WhatsApp: +256 707 585144  |  Head Office: Kampala, Uganda

Ghana Operations: Accra, Ghana — GoldBod-registered  |  Office hours: Mon–Sat 8:00am–7:00pm EAT

Start your Ghana gold export journey today — legally, compliantly, and profitably.

Ghana’s gold is in high global demand. GoldBod has made the export framework clearer and more enforceable than at any point in the country’s history. The buyers and exporters who engage correctly with this reformed system in 2026 are accessing a gold market with unmatched supply depth, competitive mine-direct pricing, and increasingly strong ESG credentials. Contact Buy Gold Bars Africa Limited to begin your compliance-first Ghana gold export today.

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