Close Menu
News Guide Africa
    What's Hot

    BoG amends Cash Reserve Ratio to mop up GH¢16bn …and shield Cedi from market pressures

    June 1, 2026

    Economy surges past US$100bn as gov’t rules out future IMF bailouts

    June 1, 2026

    Foreign confidence rebounds as Ghana secures historic US$2.61bn in FDI Inflows

    June 1, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • BoG amends Cash Reserve Ratio to mop up GH¢16bn …and shield Cedi from market pressures
    • Economy surges past US$100bn as gov’t rules out future IMF bailouts
    • Foreign confidence rebounds as Ghana secures historic US$2.61bn in FDI Inflows
    • Experts urge policy shift as Ghana targets food self-sufficiency and global competitiveness
    • Ghana’s building inflation holds steady at 2.2% …as BoG tightens real estate controls
    • GRA rolls out ITAS to drive ‘digital tax’ transformation …tightens compliance, closes revenue leakages
    • DVLA’s ‘smart reforms’ drive 39% revenue growth …as awards rain on CEO, Julius Kotey
    • Toxic Waters, Empty Nets: How Light and Chemical Fishing Threaten Ghana’s Marine Ecosystem and Public Health
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    News Guide Africa
    • Home
    • News
    • Politics
    • Agric and Environment
    • Sports
    • Mining & Energy
    • Lifestyle
    News Guide Africa
    Home » Ghana’s building inflation holds steady at 2.2% …as BoG tightens real estate controls
    Business, Small Business

    Ghana’s building inflation holds steady at 2.2% …as BoG tightens real estate controls

    Adnan AdamsBy Adnan AdamsJune 1, 2026No Comments7 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    By Adnan Adams Mohammed

    Developers and homebuilders across Ghana are experiencing a rare period of cost predictability as the country’s building materials inflation held completely steady at 2.2 percent for the month of April.

    The structural stability offers a massive breather to a sector historically plagued by volatile import costs and sharp pricing surges.

    However, as physical input costs stabilize, the regulatory landscape is shifting dramatically. The Bank of Ghana (BoG) has announced a major policy tightening cycle, rolling out rigorous, automated property and identity checks designed to permanently root out fraud, money laundering, and speculative distortions in the commercial real estate sector.

    Macro stability lowers financial risks for developers

    The latest data from the Ghana Statistical Service (GSS) indicates that the 2.2 percent baseline represents one of the most stable structural runs for the construction sector in recent memory. The stabilization is primarily driven by a steady domestic currency, which has kept the landing costs of imported finishing materials, electrical fixtures, and machinery tightly contained.

    Reviewing the data, a senior real estate analyst at a prominent Accra-based investment firm noted that cost predictability will allow developers to finally resume stalled residential projects without fear of sudden budget overruns.

    “A steady 2.2 percent building inflation rate is exactly the signal the market needs,” the analyst stated. “For years, contractors had to bake massive, arbitrary contingency premiums into their construction bids just to protect themselves against price spikes in cement, iron rods, and roofing sheets. With inflation flat-lining at this low baseline, developers can price their projects accurately, pass those savings on to buyers, and confidently break ground on new mid-market housing developments.”

    Government Statistician, Alhassan Iddrisu, speaking at the release of the latest Prime Building Cost Index (PBCI) report last week indicated that, the PBCI rose to 136.1 in April 2026 from 133.2 in April 2025. This means the average cost of building materials increased by 2.2 percent over the one-year period.

    On a month-on-month basis, prices of building inputs increased by 1.5 percent between March and April 2026.

    The report identified glazing, plumbing, roofing sheets and electrical works as the major drivers of inflation in the construction sector. Glazing recorded the highest year-on-year inflation of 16.2 percent, followed by plumbing at 14.5 percent and roofing sheets at 13 percent.

    Central bank takes aim at dirty money in real estate

    While physical construction conditions improve, the central bank is aggressively moving to sanitize the financial side of the property market. Addressing corporate leaders and compliance officers at an extractive and financial governance forum, a high-level representative from the Bank of Ghana revealed that the real estate sector has increasingly been flagged as a primary destination for illicit funds and fraudulent transactions.

    To counter this, the BoG is mandating deep integration between commercial banks, the Lands Commission, and state identity databases to automatically verify the origin of funds used in high-value property acquisitions.

    “The Bank of Ghana is pushing for significantly stronger property checks to reduce fraud and eliminate illicit financial flows in the real estate sector,” Deputy Head of the Collateral Registry Department, Mrs. Rosemary Akabutu, stated during a policy brief. “We can no longer tolerate an environment where individuals can move massive, unverified volumes of cash into luxury residential properties without clear audit trails. By enforcing rigorous, data-driven identity matching and source-of-wealth checks across all financial institutions, we are protecting genuine investors and stabilizing property valuations from artificial inflation.”

    The central bank emphasized that these automated checks will require banks to cross-reference every major property transaction against the national Ghana Card database and the Registrar General’s beneficial ownership profiles to expose individuals using complex corporate shells to conceal ownership.

    Contractors welcome cost stability but urge credit easing

    On the ground in industrial hubs like Tema and Kumasi, local contractors are praising the flat input costs but warning that high commercial lending rates still restrict broad-based sector growth. While materials are affordable, borrowing capital to buy them remains an expensive hurdle for indigenous firms.

    “We are incredibly relieved that the prices of core materials like cement and steel have held steady through April,” an executive member of the Association of Ghana Industries (AGI) Construction Sector remarks. “It means we can honor our existing contract delivery timelines without cutting corners. But to truly unlock the building industry, the central bank’s regulatory tightening must be balanced with measures that encourage commercial banks to lower construction credit rates. Stability in material prices is excellent, but we also need affordable financing to build at scale.”

    With building material inflation expected to maintain its stable path through the next quarter and the central bank’s anti-fraud frameworks slated for full operational enforcement by July, industry experts agree that Ghana’s building sector is entering a highly disciplined, institutional era defined by transparent capital and predictable costs.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Association of Ghana Industries (AGI) Bank of Ghana (BoG) building materials Construction Sector Dr. Alhassan Iddrisu Ghana Inflation Ghana Statistical Service (GSS Prime Building Cost Index (PBCI)
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
    Adnan Adams
    • Website

    Related Posts

    BoG amends Cash Reserve Ratio to mop up GH¢16bn …and shield Cedi from market pressures

    June 1, 2026

    Economy surges past US$100bn as gov’t rules out future IMF bailouts

    June 1, 2026

    Foreign confidence rebounds as Ghana secures historic US$2.61bn in FDI Inflows

    June 1, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    BREAKING: Another helicopter crashes in Kenya, Several Feared Dead

    August 7, 20251,869

    Alpha Energy to begin works on Namibia’s largest offshore diamond mines in October

    September 14, 2024870

    Prof. Yarhands Urges Mahama to Adopt Constituency-Based Presidential Staffing

    January 23, 2025743

    Exceptional client service: How two Kasoa GRA officials are redefining public relations

    May 22, 2026735
    Don't Miss
    Business, Small Business

    BoG amends Cash Reserve Ratio to mop up GH¢16bn …and shield Cedi from market pressures

    By Adnan AdamsJune 1, 2026

    By Adnan Adams Mohammed In a decisive regulatory intervention designed to insulate the domestic currency…

    Economy surges past US$100bn as gov’t rules out future IMF bailouts

    June 1, 2026

    Foreign confidence rebounds as Ghana secures historic US$2.61bn in FDI Inflows

    June 1, 2026

    Experts urge policy shift as Ghana targets food self-sufficiency and global competitiveness

    June 1, 2026
    About Us
    About Us

    Newsguide Africa is a digital news platform dedicated to providing accurate, timely, and insightful coverage of the African continent. From business and technology to lifestyle and cultural heritage, we go beyond the headlines to offer context and a positive, authentic narrative for the global African diaspora and local readers alike.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
    Our Picks

    BoG amends Cash Reserve Ratio to mop up GH¢16bn …and shield Cedi from market pressures

    June 1, 2026

    Economy surges past US$100bn as gov’t rules out future IMF bailouts

    June 1, 2026

    Foreign confidence rebounds as Ghana secures historic US$2.61bn in FDI Inflows

    June 1, 2026
    Most Popular

    BREAKING: Another helicopter crashes in Kenya, Several Feared Dead

    August 7, 20251,869

    Alpha Energy to begin works on Namibia’s largest offshore diamond mines in October

    September 14, 2024870

    Prof. Yarhands Urges Mahama to Adopt Constituency-Based Presidential Staffing

    January 23, 2025743

    © 2026 Newsguide Africa. All rights reserved.

    • Home
    • Science

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.