In a mid-season revision, Ghana’s government has raised the farmgate price for cocoa by GH₵400 per 64-kilogram bag, delivering a new price of GH₵3,625 (equivalent to about GH₵58,000 per tonne) effective October 3, 2025. This marks a 12.27 % upward adjustment over the price set in August.
The decision follows extensive consultations with stakeholders and underlines cocoa’s centrality to Ghana’s economic and social livelihood. Margins, fees, and the share allocated to other actors in the cocoa value chain were left unchanged, meaning the full increment accrues to farmers. The Ghana Cocoa Board (COCOBOD) also committed to providing essential inputs — fertilizers, insecticides, spraying machines, and others — free to farmers.
Why the hike, and why now?
This is the second price adjustment in a trending pattern across West African cocoa producers. Just a day prior, Ivory Coast raised its farmgate price, prompting Ghana to respond to avoid farmer defections or cross-border smuggling. Rising production and input costs — especially for fertilizer and labor — have squeezed farmers. The government cited new forecasts and stakeholder feedback as justification for the upward revision.
Still, the sector remains volatile. Earlier in August, over 300,000 cocoa farmers protested the initial price, accusing the government of failing to honor previous promises and threatening to smuggle their harvests to neighboring countries with higher prices. Smuggling has historically eaten into Ghana’s export volumes — in the 2023/24 season, the country reportedly lost 160,000 tons of cocoa to illicit exports.
The revision is widely viewed as a political and economic signal: Ghana is under pressure to retain farmers, sustain cocoa production, and prevent value leakage. But whether the increase is sufficient to quell unrest and counter smuggling remains to be tested in the coming weeks













