Ghana’s Hidden Gems: Off-the-Beaten-Path Places to Explore

Ghana's best hidden gems and off-the-beaten-path experiences: the Nzulezo stilt village, sacred monkeys, the Paga crocodiles, Wechiau hippos, bead villages and more, region by region.

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The castles, Kakum and Mole rightly top every Ghana itinerary — but the country’s quiet magic lives in the places the tour buses skip. A village built on stilts over a lagoon. Sacred monkeys that climb onto your arm. Crocodiles you can sit beside. A community making beads from recycled glass exactly as their grandparents did. These are Ghana’s hidden gems: the offbeat, authentic experiences that turn a good trip into a great story. Here’s a local’s pick of the best, region by region.

Why seek out the hidden gems?

Ghana’s big sights are unmissable, but they can feel busy and well-trodden. The hidden gems offer something rarer: genuine encounters, few other tourists, and a deeper sense of how the country actually lives. Many are community-run, so visiting puts money straight into local hands. You’ll need a bit more effort — a detour, a canoe, a hike — but the payoff is the kind of experience you’ll still be talking about years later.

Ghana’s hidden gems at a glance

Hidden gem Region Why go
Nzulezo stilt village Western A 500-year-old village on stilts, reached by canoe
Tafi Atome Volta Sacred Mona monkeys that approach you
Paga Crocodile Pond Upper East Sit beside a sacred, docile crocodile
Sirigu Upper East Hand-painted houses & pottery
Wechiau Hippo Sanctuary Upper West River cruises to see wild hippos
Lake Bosomtwe Ashanti Ghana’s only natural (crater) lake
Krobo bead villages Eastern Recycled-glass beadmaking workshops
Lou Moon Lagoon Western A palm-fringed turquoise cove

Coast & west

  • Nzulezo stilt village — an entire community built on stilts over a lagoon in the far west, reached by an hour’s canoe from Beyin (see our Western Region guide).
  • Cape Three Points & Akwidaa — remote, near-empty beaches with eco-lodges and seasonal turtle nesting.
  • Fort Metal Cross (Dixcove) — an atmospheric clifftop fort above a working fishing harbour.
  • Lou Moon Lagoon (Axim) — a palm-fringed turquoise cove, the prettiest swim on the coast.

Forest & centre

  • Tafi Atome Monkey Sanctuary — sacred Mona monkeys, protected for generations, that approach you closely.
  • Boabeng-Fiema Monkey Sanctuary — mona and rare colobus monkeys revered by the villages.
  • Bobiri Butterfly Sanctuary — a peaceful forest near Kumasi alive with hundreds of butterfly species.
  • Krobo bead-making (Cedi Beads, Odumase) — watch vivid beads fired from recycled glass in the Eastern Region.
  • Lake Bosomtwe — Ghana’s only natural lake, a serene sacred crater near Kumasi.

The north

  • Paga Crocodile Pond — sacred, docile crocodiles you can sit beside, up by the Burkina border.
  • Sirigu — a village of hand-painted houses and pottery in the Upper East.
  • Wechiau Hippo Sanctuary — river cruises to see wild hippos on the Black Volta.
  • Tongo Hills & Tengzug Shrine — balancing granite boulders and a powerful traditional shrine.
  • Larabanga Mosque & Mystic Stone — ancient mud architecture near Mole.

Near Accra

  • Shai Hills Resource Reserve — baboons, antelope and caves about an hour from the city.
  • Asenema & Tsenku Falls — quiet waterfalls within day-trip range (see our waterfalls guide).
  • Aburi’s woodcarvers & gardens — cool hills and craft just up the ridge.

Browse Ghana’s hidden gems

Tap any place for the full details, map and visitor tips.

Tips for the road less travelled

  • Hire a driver or guide. Many gems are rural and tricky to reach by public transport.
  • Go community-run where you can — sanctuaries and craft villages channel your money locally.
  • Carry small cash for entry fees, guides and tips; cards won’t work out here.
  • Build in time. These are detours and slow roads — don’t over-pack the day.
  • Ask before photographing people, shrines and ceremonies.

The bottom line

Ghana’s hidden gems are where the trip gets personal — canoe to Nzulezo, let the Tafi Atome monkeys climb onto your arm, sit beside the Paga crocodiles, and watch beads born from glass in the Krobo hills. They take more effort than the headline sights, but they reward you with the real, unpolished, unforgettable Ghana. Weave a few into your route with our itinerary and things to do guides.

FAQ

What are the best hidden gems in Ghana?
Standouts include the Nzulezo stilt village, the Tafi Atome and Boabeng-Fiema monkey sanctuaries, the Paga crocodile pond, the painted village of Sirigu, the Wechiau hippo sanctuary, Lake Bosomtwe, and the Krobo bead-making workshops — offbeat, authentic and community-run.
What can you do off the beaten path in Ghana?
Canoe to a stilt village, meet sacred monkeys and crocodiles, cruise for wild hippos, hike to a granite shrine, learn beadmaking or pottery, and find near-empty beaches in the far west — experiences far from the main castle-and-Kakum trail.
Is Nzulezo worth visiting?
Yes — it’s a genuinely unique village built entirely on stilts over a lagoon, lived in for around 500 years and reached by a scenic hour-long canoe ride from Beyin in the Western Region (open daily except Thursdays).
Where can you see monkeys in Ghana?
At the community sanctuaries of Tafi Atome (Volta) and Boabeng-Fiema (Bono), where sacred monkeys protected for generations roam freely and approach visitors closely.
How do you reach Ghana’s hidden gems?
Most are rural and best reached with a hired driver or local guide rather than public transport. Carry small cash for fees and tips, choose community-run options, and allow extra time for slow roads.