Ghana has approved new visa waiver agreements that will allow citizens of Antigua and Barbuda, the Maldives, and Zambia to travel to the country without visas for short stays, in a move aimed at strengthening diplomatic and economic ties.
The announcement was made by Ghana’s Foreign Minister Sam Okudzeto Ablakwa, who confirmed that Cabinet had granted approval for the agreements covering all categories of passports, including ordinary, service, and diplomatic documents.
After being sealed by Parliament, the changes will cover the Maldives, Zambia, and Antigua and Barbuda, Minister of Foreign Affairs Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa said as quoted by local media.
“We shall keep negotiating more Visa Waiver Agreements as we add greater value to the Ghanaian Passport, and at the same time enhance security protocols around acquiring Ghanaian passports,” he said.
Under the arrangement, citizens of Ghana and the three partner countries will be permitted to stay for up to 30 days per visit without requiring a visa. The policy is expected to ease travel restrictions, encourage tourism flows, and support business and cultural exchanges between the countries.
According to the minister, the agreements still require parliamentary ratification before they can take full effect. He added that further negotiations are ongoing as part of a broader strategy to expand Ghana’s global mobility partnerships.
“We shall keep negotiating more Visa Waiver Agreements as we add greater value to the Ghanaian Passport, and at the same time enhance security protocols around acquiring Ghanaian Passports.” Ablakwa added.
Visa waiver versus visa-free entry
Ghana’s Foreign Minister Sam Okudzeto Ablakwa has previously drawn a distinction between visa waiver agreements and full visa-free entry as part of Ghana’s broader immigration and foreign policy framework.

Under a visa waiver arrangement, travellers are allowed to enter a country without applying for a visa in advance, but they remain subject to immigration checks on arrival, including conditions such as permitted duration of stay and entry approval at the border.
Visa-free entry, by contrast, generally involves fewer administrative requirements and is often linked to deeper regional integration or long-standing multilateral agreements.
In Ghana’s case, the policy reflects a controlled approach to liberalizing travel. The government is easing mobility through bilateral agreements while still maintaining full oversight of entry conditions, security screening, and border control processes.
The new agreements form part of a wider foreign policy push by Accra to strengthen the international standing of the Ghanaian passport while maintaining tighter security protocols around travel documentation.
Zambia appears in both the February agreement and the latest Cabinet-approved visa waiver package.
Officials say the strategy is focused on striking a balance between openness and control, as Ghana continues to position itself as a regional hub for diplomacy, trade, and investment.
The government has indicated that more visa waiver deals are in the pipeline, as it seeks to gradually expand travel access while improving security systems around passport issuance.
If ratified, the agreements will mark another step in Ghana’s effort to deepen diplomatic integration and enhance mobility access in an increasingly interconnected global economy.
Additional Source: Business Insider Africa








