Ghana Souvenir Price Guide: What to Pay (in Cedis)

A Ghana souvenir price guide in cedis: ballpark fair prices for kente, beads, baskets, carvings, drums and shea butter, plus how to bargain and tell quality from tat.

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The single best defence against being overcharged in a Ghanaian market is knowing roughly what things cost. Souvenir prices here are almost always negotiable, and first quotes to tourists can be three or four times the real rate — so a sense of fair value turns bargaining from stressful guesswork into friendly fun. This guide gives ballpark prices in Ghana cedis (GH₵) for the most common crafts and souvenirs, plus how to haggle to a good deal. Treat the numbers as a guide, not gospel — prices move with the cedi, size and quality.

Ballpark souvenir prices

Item Rough fair price (GH₵)
Glass-bead bracelet 10–40
Beaded necklace 30–120
Printed “kente print” cloth (6 yards) 120–300
Hand-woven kente stole/strip 250–800+
Batik / tie-dye cloth (per yard) 30–80
Small woodcarving / mask 50–200
Large carving / stool 200–800+
Djembe drum (medium) 250–700
Bolga basket 80–250
Leather sandals 60–200
Shea butter (tub) 20–60
Black soap (bar) 5–20
Small painting / print 80–400+

These are realistic settled prices at markets and the Arts Centre, not opening quotes. Quality hand-woven kente, large carvings and original art can run much higher — and are worth it.

Why prices vary so much

Three things drive the spread: quality (hand-woven vs printed, hardwood vs soft), size, and where you buy. Buying direct from a craft village (kente in Bonwire, beads in Krobo, baskets in Bolga) is cheaper and more authentic than a tourist stall; the Arts Centre is convenient but starts highest. The cedi’s exchange rate also shifts prices over time, so use these as relative guides.

How to bargain to a fair price

  • Greet first, then ask “how much?” — never grab and quote.
  • Counter at a third to a half of the opening price.
  • Bundle — buying several items from one seller earns a better rate.
  • Walk away politely if it’s too high; the “last price” usually drops.
  • Pay in small cash or MoMo (see our money guide); no cards at stalls.
  • Don’t haggle hard over tiny sums — a few cedis means more to the maker than to you.

Telling quality from tat

Real hand-woven kente is built from sewn-together narrow strips with tiny irregularities; smooth, uniform “kente print” is machine-printed cotton and far cheaper — both are fine, just know which you’re paying for. Hardwood carvings are heavier and finely finished; very light, rough ones are softwood. Genuine shea butter is off-white/ivory with a nutty smell. A little scrutiny keeps you from overpaying.

The bottom line

Know the ballpark, and shopping in Ghana becomes a pleasure: counter low, stay friendly, bundle, and walk if needed. Buy from the craft villages for the best value and authenticity, use the Arts Centre for convenience, and don’t sweat a few cedis with the artisans. For where to shop and what each craft means, see our shopping in Ghana and Arts Centre guides.

FAQ

How much do souvenirs cost in Ghana?
Roughly: bead bracelets GH₵10–40, beaded necklaces GH₵30–120, printed cloth GH₵120–300 for 6 yards, small carvings GH₵50–200, Bolga baskets GH₵80–250, shea butter GH₵20–60. Hand-woven kente and large carvings cost much more.
Are souvenir prices negotiable in Ghana?
Almost always, at markets and the Arts Centre. First quotes to tourists are inflated, so counter at a third to a half, bundle items, and be ready to walk away for a better price. Malls and fixed-price shops are not negotiable.
How much should I pay for kente cloth?
Printed “kente print” runs about GH₵120–300 for six yards, while genuine hand-woven kente stoles or strips start around GH₵250 and rise well past GH₵800 for fine, large pieces. Buy in Bonwire or Adanwomase for the best value.
Where can you get the best prices on crafts in Ghana?
Direct from the craft villages — kente in Bonwire, beads in Krobo/Odumase, baskets in Bolgatanga — which are cheaper and more authentic than tourist stalls. The Accra Arts Centre is convenient but starts with the highest quotes.
Should I pay in cedis or dollars for souvenirs?
Pay in Ghana cedis (cash or Mobile Money). Quoting and paying in cedis gets you a fairer price than dollars, and stalls don’t take cards.