Ghanaian culture is the real souvenir — warm to the point of disarming, proud, devout and joyful. It’s a place where funerals become festivals, where cloth carries proverbs, and where a stranger becomes a friend over a shared plate of jollof. Get a feel for it before you arrive and the whole country opens up to you.
This is where we go beyond the sights into how Ghana actually lives. Start with our guide to Ghanaian culture →
Festivals & customary rites
Ghana’s calendar bursts with colour and meaning — the Ga harvest festival Homowo, the Winneba Aboakyer deer hunt, the Asante Akwasidae, the Ewe Hogbetsotso, and rites of passage like the Krobo Dipo and the joyful outdooring (naming) ceremonies. Time your trip around one and you’ll see the culture at full voltage. See the full Ghana festivals guide →

Aboakyer Deer-Hunt Festival
Winneba's deer-hunt festival (May) - two Asafo companies race to catch a live antelope. Colourful and intense.

AfroFuture (Detty December)
Accra's flagship December music festival (formerly Afrochella) - Afrobeats headliners, art and food. The heart of Detty December.

Akwasidae Festival
The Asante royal festival every 42 days at Manhyia, Kumasi - the Asantehene in full regalia. Time a Kumasi trip around it.

Bakatue Festival
Elmina's lagoon festival (July) - net-casting, a regatta and a durbar marking the fishing season.

Bugum (Fire) Festival
The northern fire festival - torch-lit night processions marking the Islamic new year. Dramatic after dark.

Chale Wote Street Art Festival
Jamestown's wild street-art festival (Aug) - murals, performance, fashion and huge crowds. Accra's most creative weekend.

Damba Festival
A northern festival (date varies) - horse-riding chiefs, drumming and durbars in Tamale and across the north.

Fetu Afahye
Cape Coast's big September durbar - chiefs in palanquins, Asafo companies and a sea of colour.

Hogbetsotso Festival
The Anlo-Ewe festival (Nov) marking the migration from Notsie - a grand durbar at Anloga.

Homowo Festival
The Ga harvest festival (Aug-Sept) - sprinkling of kpokpoi, drumming and processions across Accra, Teshie and Nungua.

Kundum Festival
A harvest festival of the Nzema and Ahanta (Aug-Nov) - drumming, dancing and durbars along the western coast.

Kwahu Easter Paragliding
Only Easter weekend. Paragliding over Kwahu escarpment. Unique annual event.

Odwira Festival
The Akuapem purification festival (Sept-Oct) in Akropong and Aburi - fasting, feasting and a grand durbar.
Churches, mosques & sacred sites
Faith runs through daily life here — from joyful, music-filled Sunday services to centuries-old Sahelian mud mosques and traditional shrines. Here’s where to experience it respectfully.

Abossey Okai Central Mosque
A central mosque in the bustling Abossey Okai district — lively Friday prayers in one of Accra's busiest areas.

Accra Ghana Temple (Latter-day Saints)
The Latter-day Saints temple on Independence Avenue, North Ridge (dedicated 2004) — a striking white landmark; grounds and visitors' centre welcome guests.

Action Chapel International
Archbishop Duncan-Williams' Prayer Cathedral on Spintex Road — a flagship of Ghanaian charismatic Christianity. Sunday service is an experience.

Airport Residential Mosque
A neighbourhood mosque in Airport Residential near Nyaho Medical Centre — convenient for visitors staying in the area.

Christ Embassy Ghana
A large charismatic church with several Accra campuses — high-energy worship and a big diaspora following.

Christ Presbyterian Church, Akropong
One of Ghana's oldest churches (Basel Mission, 1830s) in the cool Akuapem hills — pair with Aburi gardens.

Christ the King Catholic Church
A landmark Catholic parish in Cantonments near Independence Avenue — calm, central and well-kept.

Holy Trinity Cathedral
Accra's Anglican cathedral — a Romanesque colonial landmark on High Street near the Supreme Court.

International Central Gospel Church (ICGC)
One of Ghana's largest evangelical churches; the Christ Temple draws thousands on Sundays.

Lake Bosomtwe
Sacred crater lake. No motorboats — traditional paddleboats only. Swim allowed.

Larabanga Mud Mosque
Oldest mosque in West Africa. Remove shoes. Small donation expected.

Larteh Sacred Grove & Shrine
An intact traditional spiritual landscape in the Akuapem hills — sacred groves, shrines and an annual festival.

Maluwe Mosque
A centuries-old mud-brick mosque on the road to Bole, in the same Sudanic tradition as Larabanga.

Nakore Mosque
An ancient Sudanic mud-and-stick mosque outside Wa — one of Ghana's eight old mosques, quieter than Larabanga.

National Cathedral of Ghana
Ghana's ambitious National Cathedral near Parliament in Ridge — still under construction, but a landmark in the making.

National Mosque of Ghana
Accra's grand Friday mosque (Turkish-built) in Kanda. Most striking around Eid. Dress modestly and ask before photographing.

Nima Central Mosque
The main mosque of Nima, Accra's vibrant Muslim quarter — best around Friday prayers and Eid. Dress modestly and ask before photographing.

Nungua Stool House & Shrine
Where the sacred stools of Nungua's chiefs are kept and venerated — a glimpse of Ga traditional authority.

Paga Crocodile Pond
Sacred crocs — sit on them. GHS 20 tip to handler. Nothing like it in West Africa.

Perez Dome
Ghana's largest church auditorium (14,000 seats) in Dzorwulu — a window into the scale of Ghanaian Pentecostalism.

Resurrection Presbyterian Church
A historic downtown church at the Presbyterian Church of Ghana HQ — notable architecture and big Sunday services.

Royalhouse Chapel International
Rev. Sam Korankye Ankrah's charismatic ministry — a major Accra congregation with lively Sunday services.

St Peter’s Cathedral, Cape Coast
Cape Coast's colonial-era Anglican cathedral — easy to combine with the castle and Elmina.

Tano Sacred Grove & Shrine
A sacred grove of the Tano river deity with live pythons kept as sacred — dramatic rocks and deep ritual history.

Wesley Methodist Cathedral, Kumasi
A Romanesque Methodist cathedral near central Kumasi, part of the city's deep Methodist tradition.

Winneba Prayer Camp
A syncretic healing prayer camp of the Twelve Apostles Church — an extraordinary, sensitive cultural visit.



