Good News for Travellers As Full List of Countries Ghanaians Can Visit Without a Visa Surfaces

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  • Ghanaians can enjoy visa-free travel to countries across Africa, Asia, the Middle East, Europe and the Americas, easing cross-border journeys
  • Visa-on-arrival options expand travel opportunities for many Ghanaians to popular foreign destinations, including Kenya and Rwanda
  • Ghana's recent agreements with several other countries have enhanced travel options for travellers beyond Africa to various global regions

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Ghanaians looking to explore the world have more options than many may realise, with several countries on the continent welcoming the nation's passport holders without requiring a visa in advance.

Ghanaians can access multiple countries across the world in 2026 without requiring a visa beforehand. Photo source: JGI/Tom Grill/Getty Images, JOSEPH PREZIOSO / AFP/Getty Images
Source: Getty Images

Travelling within Africa and other continents has historically involved significant bureaucratic hurdles, but several nations, including Ghana, have moved to ease cross-border movement for citizens of fellow African Union member states.

African countries Ghanaians can enter without visa

Among the destinations Ghanaians can visit without a prior visa are several West African nations, largely due to the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) free movement protocol.

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Countries such as Nigeria, Senegal, Côte d'Ivoire, Togo, Benin, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, The Gambia, Cape Verde, and Burkina Faso all fall within this arrangement, allowing Ghanaians to enter freely for stays of up to 90 days in most cases.

Beyond West Africa, Ghanaians can also access several countries through visa-on-arrival arrangements, where a visa is granted upon landing rather than requiring prior application.

These include destinations such as Kenya, Rwanda, Mozambique, Madagascar, Comoros, and Togo, among others.

Rwanda, in particular, has positioned itself as one of Africa's most open destinations, extending visa-free access to all African Union passport holders as part of its broader pan-African travel policy.

The list of African countries Ghanaians can enter without a visa is below:

  1. Benin – 90 days (Visa-free)
  2. Burkina Faso – Visa-free
  3. Burundi – Visa-free / Visa-on-arrival
  4. Cape Verde – 90 days (Online pre-registration required)
  5. Côte d’Ivoire – 90 days (Visa-free)
  6. Eswatini – 30 days (Visa-free)
  7. Guinea – 90 days (Visa-free)
  8. Guinea-Bissau – 90 days (Visa-free)
  9. Kenya – 90 days (Visa-free)
  10. Liberia – Visa-free
  11. Malawi – 90 days (Visa-free)
  12. Mali – Visa-free
  13. Mauritius – 90 days (Visa-free)
  14. Niger – Visa-free
  15. Nigeria – Visa-free
  16. Rwanda – 90 days (Visa-free)
  17. Senegal – 90 days (Visa-free)
  18. Seychelles – Visa-free
  19. South Africa – 90 days (Visa-free)
  20. Tanzania – 90 days (Visa-free)
  21. Uganda – 90 days (Visa-free)
  22. Zambia – Visa on Arrival
  23. Zimbabwe – 90 days (Visa-free)

Other foreign countries Ghanaians can enter visa-free

Aside from the African continent, Ghana has different visa-waiver agreements with several countries in the Caribbean and the Americas, the Middle East, Asia and the Pacific and Europe.

According to Passport Index, the revised travel framework allows passport holders to enter several international destinations using standard entry protocols rather than an advanced consular sticker.

Caribbean and the Americas

  1. Bahamas – 90 days (Visa-free)
  2. Barbados – 180 days (Visa-free)
  3. Belize – Visa-free
  4. Bolivia – Visa on Arrival
  5. Commonwealth of Dominica – 180 days (Visa-free)
  6. Grenada – 90 days (Visa-free)
  7. Guyana – 90 days (Visa-free)
  8. Haiti – 90 days (Visa-free)
  9. Jamaica – 90 days (Visa-free)
  10. St Lucia – Visa on Arrival
  11. Trinidad and Tobago – Visa-free
  12. St Vincent and the Grenadines – 90 days (Visa-free)

Asia and the Pacific

  1. Bangladesh – 90 days (Visa-free)
  2. Cambodia – 30 days (Visa on arrival/E-visa)
  3. Cook Islands – Visa-free
  4. Fiji – 4 months (Visa-free)
  5. Kiribati – 90 days (Visa-free)
  6. Maldives – Free visa on arrival
  7. Micronesia – 30 days (Visa-free)
  8. Palau – Free visa on arrival
  9. Philippines – 30 days (Visa-free)
  10. Samoa – 60 days (Visa-free)
  11. Singapore – Visa-free
  12. Tuvalu – E-visa
  13. Vanuatu – 120 days (Visa-free)

Middle East

  1. Iran – Visa on Arrival
  2. Jordan – Visa on Arrival

Europe

  1. Albania – E-visa
  2. Moldova – E-visa

Ghana also recently signed a visa-waiver agreement with South Korea in Seoul during the 2026 Korea–Africa Foreign Ministers’ Meeting on June 1, 2026.

However, only holders of diplomatic and service passports would be able to travel between these two countries without requiring visas.

What Ghanaians should know before travelling

While visa-free or visa-on-arrival access removes one major barrier, travellers are still advised to carry a valid passport with sufficient validity, proof of onward travel, and evidence of accommodation or sufficient funds, as immigration officers in some countries may request them.

The specific terms of entry, including the permitted length of stay and any associated fees for visa-on-arrival, can vary and are subject to change.

Ghanaians planning international travel are encouraged to verify entry requirements with the relevant embassies or official government sources before departure, as policies can shift without much public notice.

The US, under Donald Trump, shares the Visa Waiver Programme list, which allows citizens from 42 nations visa-free entry for 90 days. Photo credit: @Getty Images
Source: Getty Images

US lists countries eligible for visa-free travel

Earlier, YEN.com.gh reported that the US listed countries eligible for visa-free travel for tourism or business for up to 90 days as part of its Visa Waiver Programme.

The absence of any African countries on this list has raised significant concerns amid ongoing discussions around US travel policies and their impact on the world.

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Proofreading by Bruce Douglas, copy editor at YEN.com.gh.

Source: YEN.com.gh