Koforidua Bead Market: Buying Ghana’s Glass Beads

A guide to the Koforidua Thursday bead market and Krobo glass beads: where to buy, the Cedi Beads workshops, bead types, what to pay, and the culture behind them.

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Every Thursday, the town of Koforidua in the Eastern Region hosts one of West Africa’s great treasures: a vast bead market, where tables overflow with strings of glass beads in every colour imaginable. Beads are woven deep into Ghanaian culture — worn at naming ceremonies, puberty rites, weddings and funerals — and the Krobo people of this region are the master beadmakers, transforming recycled glass into wearable art. Here’s a guide to buying beads in Koforidua and the Krobo bead country, what to look for, and what to pay.

The famous Thursday bead market

Koforidua’s bead market (locally “Kofↄridua”) runs every Thursday and is the largest in the country — sellers come from across the Krobo bead-making heartland with thousands of strands: recycled-glass “powder glass” beads, old European trade beads (Bodom, chevrons, millefiori), Krobo painted beads, bauxite and brass. It’s a riot of colour and the single best place to buy beads in Ghana, at the best prices. Get there in the morning for the fullest choice.

Krobo bead country

The beads come from the Krobo area around Odumase-Krobo and Somanya in the Eastern Region, the traditional centre of Ghanaian glass-beadmaking. Here you can visit workshops — the famous Cedi Beads among them — to see the whole process: bottles and glass crushed to powder, packed into clay moulds with designs, fired in wood kilns, then shaped, polished and strung. It’s a fascinating, hands-on visit and many workshops let you try making your own (see our Eastern Region guide).

What to buy

Bead type Note
Powder-glass beads Made from recycled glass — the Krobo specialty
Painted Krobo beads Hand-painted designs, very colourful
Old trade beads Antique European Bodom, chevrons, millefiori
Bauxite & brass Earthy, traditional accents

What to pay

Simple glass-bead bracelets go for around GH₵10–40, fuller necklaces GH₵30–120, with antique trade beads and elaborate pieces costing more. Prices at the Koforidua market and Krobo workshops are far better than tourist stalls in Accra. Bargaining is expected but gentle — see our souvenir price guide.

Tips for buying beads

  • Go on a Thursday for the Koforidua market; arrive in the morning.
  • Visit a Krobo workshop (e.g. Cedi Beads) to buy direct and see the craft.
  • Bargain kindly and buy several strands for a better rate.
  • Ask the meaning — bead colours and types carry cultural significance.
  • Cash or MoMo only; carry small notes.

The bottom line

For beads, time your trip to Koforidua’s Thursday market and add a Krobo workshop visit — together they’re the source of Ghana’s glass-bead artistry, at the best prices, with the story of recycled glass becoming wearable heritage. Buy direct, bargain gently, and ask what the colours mean. Plan it with our shopping and Eastern Region guides.

FAQ

When is the Koforidua bead market?
Every Thursday in Koforidua, the Eastern Region capital. It’s the largest bead market in Ghana, drawing sellers from across the Krobo bead-making area — go in the morning for the best choice.
Where are Ghana’s beads made?
In the Krobo area around Odumase-Krobo and Somanya in the Eastern Region, the traditional heart of Ghanaian glass-beadmaking. Workshops like Cedi Beads make powder-glass beads from recycled glass.
How are Krobo glass beads made?
Recycled glass is crushed to powder, packed with designs into clay moulds, fired in wood kilns, then shaped, polished and strung. Many workshops let visitors watch or try it themselves.
How much do Ghanaian beads cost?
Glass-bead bracelets run about GH₵10–40 and necklaces GH₵30–120, with antique trade beads and elaborate pieces more. Prices at Koforidua and Krobo workshops beat Accra tourist stalls.
Why are beads important in Ghanaian culture?
Beads are worn at naming ceremonies, puberty rites (especially Krobo Dipo), weddings and funerals, and their colours and types carry meaning — status, beauty, spirituality — making them far more than decoration.