Tourism
Visa-Free Travel vs Free Visa – What Ghana’s New Policy for Africans Really Means
Accra, Ghana – As Ghana prepares to roll out a landmark travel policy granting easier access to all African passport holders from May 25, 2026, many people are confused about the difference between “visa-free travel” and “free visa.”
The two terms sound similar but have very different practical implications.
Visa-Free Travel means citizens from eligible countries do not need to apply for a visa at all. They can simply travel with a valid passport and enter the country without prior approval or payment. This is the most open form of mobility. For example, Ghana and Zambia recently agreed on visa-free entry for each other’s citizens — meaning Ghanaians and Zambians can travel between the two countries without applying for any visa.
Free Visa, on the other hand, still requires travellers to submit a visa application and obtain approval before travel.
The only advantage is that the usual visa processing fee is waived. According to President John Dramani Mahama’s announcement, this is the model Ghana will adopt for all African passport holders starting May 25. Africans will need to apply and get approved, but they will not pay any application fees.
There is also a third system known as Visa on Arrival, where eligible travellers can apply for and receive a visa immediately upon arrival at the airport or border (usually after paying a fee).
Ghana’s new policy is a major step toward greater intra-African mobility and reflects the country’s commitment to Pan-Africanism and the goals of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).
While it is not full visa-free travel, it significantly reduces the financial and bureaucratic burden for Africans wishing to visit Ghana for tourism, business, or family reasons.
Taste GH
The Rich, Homely Flavours Behind Ghana’s Beloved Vegetable Stew
Long before the plate reaches the table, vegetable stew announces itself through the air — the scent of tomatoes simmering slowly with onions, peppers, carrots and leafy greens filling homes, roadside chop bars, and busy market corners across Ghana.
For many Ghanaians, vegetable stew is not tied to one region or occasion. It is everyday food with extraordinary comfort built into it.
The stew appears in countless forms depending on the household and community preparing it. In some homes, kontomire leaves bring a rich, earthy taste.
Elsewhere, cabbage, carrot, and green peppers are folded into thick tomato-based sauces layered with smoked fish, herrings, or tender meat. Palm oil often adds colour and depth, while fresh pepper gives the stew its familiar warmth.
@akosuahstastyrecipe You Can Never Go Wrong With This Vegetable Stew💛💙 ✅INGREDIENTS Cabbage Fresh tomatoes Tomato paste Chopped habaneros Onions Tolo beef (salted beef) Garlic & Ginger Paste Curry Black pepper Paprika Onga shrimp tablet Corned beef #fyp #viral #stew#vegetables #yam @Onga Ghana ♬ Big Baller – Flavour
One reason vegetable stew remains popular is its flexibility. It can be eaten with rice at lunch, yam for dinner, boiled plantain on weekends, or even with soft kenkey after a long day.
Across Ghana’s towns and cities, it is the kind of meal that quietly adapts to family budgets, seasonal ingredients, and personal taste without losing its identity.
Beyond flavour, the dish carries a strong health appeal. Packed with vegetables, fibre, and natural ingredients, it reflects a style of cooking rooted in balance rather than excess.
Many families still prefer it as a nourishing homemade alternative to heavily processed meals.
Visitors exploring Ghanaian cuisine often arrive expecting jollof rice or grilled tilapia, but vegetable stew offers something equally memorable — a taste of daily Ghanaian life.
It is hearty without being heavy, deeply flavourful without unnecessary complexity, and comforting in a way that feels universal.
In Ghana, vegetable stew is more than a side dish. It is the taste of home served one steaming spoonful at a time.
Sights and Sounds
The Crown Forest Experience Redefining Tourism in Ghana
A giraffe walks calmly past the window while an electric buggy glides through the open savanna without a sound. There are no fences in sight, no roaring engines, no rush from city traffic.
Just wind moving through tall grass and the strange, thrilling realization that this is still Ghana.
That moment has become the defining experience at Crown Forest, a private safari eco-park located in Gamoa and Zouem in Ghana’s Central Region, roughly two hours from Accra.
In a country more globally known for its coastlines, castles and vibrant urban culture, Crown Forest is building a different image of Ghanaian tourism — one shaped by wildlife, stillness and immersion in nature.
Spread across 500 acres, the park offers something rarely associated with West Africa: an open safari landscape where zebras, impalas, hippos and giraffes roam freely while guests move quietly among them in electric-powered vehicles designed to minimize disturbance.
The silence changes everything. Visitors are not simply observing animals; they are sharing space with them.
Adventure Beyond the Game Drive
The safari may draw people in, but the experience stretches far beyond wildlife viewing. Crown Forest is designed as a full-day escape from urban life, where every activity pulls visitors deeper into the landscape.
Quad bike trails cut through dusty terrain and wooded paths, adding bursts of speed and adrenaline to the calm rhythm of the park.
Elsewhere, guests kayak across the Hidden-Sab Beach area, where the water slows the pace and the surrounding quiet settles in almost immediately.
A swimming pool hidden among the trees offers relief from the afternoon heat, creating the feeling of discovering a private retreat in the middle of the wilderness.
What makes the experience particularly striking is how quickly the outside world disappears. Phones stay in pockets longer. Conversations soften.
Even visitors arriving from Accra’s constant movement seem to adjust naturally to the slower tempo of the reserve.
For international travellers unfamiliar with Ghana’s tourism landscape, Crown Forest represents a growing shift toward experiential travel — places that combine recreation, ecology and cultural reflection rather than offering entertainment alone.
The Road That Changes the Mood
Yet the most powerful part of Crown Forest is not the safari. It is Assamansi Road, a preserved ancestral slave route located within the grounds.
Walking the route changes the emotional weight of the visit. The beauty of the savanna suddenly carries deeper meaning, reminding visitors that these landscapes witnessed centuries of movement, suffering, and survival long before tourism arrived. The quiet there feels intentional and deeply human.
Day passes range from 600 to 990 Ghana cedis per person, covering the safari experience, lunch, and up to 8 hours in the park. Guests wanting more time can stay overnight at the resort hotel, where rooms range from $350 to $500 per night.
But long after the price is forgotten, most visitors leave remembering the silence: a giraffe in the distance, the crunch of gravel beneath an electric buggy, and the feeling of discovering a side of Ghana many never expected to exist.
Taste GH
The Rich, Nutty Taste of Kontomire Stew That Keeps Ghana Coming Back
The rich scent of palm oil simmering with onions and cocoyam leaves can stop conversations in a Ghanaian household.
Before the first spoonful is served, Kontomire Stew has already announced itself through aroma alone — earthy, smoky, nutty, and deeply comforting.
Made from tender cocoyam leaves, this beloved Ghanaian dish carries a flavour that feels both bold and soothing at the same time.
The leaves soften into a velvety texture as they cook, absorbing the richness of palm oil and the distinctive taste of ground egusi, or melon seeds, often added for body and depth.
In some homes, tomatoes and peppers bring a gentle heat, while others keep the stew simple and rustic.
Kontomire Stew is one of those meals that quietly tells the story of Ghanaian cooking: ingredients drawn from the land, transformed through patience and instinct into something unforgettable.
It is commonly paired with boiled yam, plantain, rice, or even ampesi, making it versatile enough for both everyday meals and family gatherings.
For vegetarians, Kontomire Stew offers a rare combination of comfort and nourishment. Cocoyam leaves are rich in iron, fibre, and vitamins, while egusi adds protein and healthy fats.
The result is a dish that feels hearty without being heavy.
Across Ghana, recipes differ from region to region and kitchen to kitchen, but the emotional connection remains the same.
Many people remember the dish from childhood — a steaming bowl shared at the family table after school or during weekend visits to grandparents.
For international food lovers discovering West African cuisine for the first time, Kontomire Stew offers more than flavour. It offers warmth, memory, and a glimpse into the soul of Ghanaian cooking.
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