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Ride-hailing in Ghana is split across 3 apps that actually operate at scale. Bolt is the editorial pick: bolt dominates Accra; Uber is the foreign-familiar alternative. Yango entered Ghana in 2022. Alternatives worth installing as a backup: Uber, Yango.
Last updated: May 2026 · 3 apps reviewed
Bolt
Bolt dominates Accra; Uber is the foreign-familiar alternative. Yango entered Ghana in 2022.
When the pick’s drivers surge or decline trips, having a second app installed saves the standoff at the curb.
Uber
Yango
Each city guide carries the same ride-hailing picks at city granularity, plus cost, climate, FIRE math, food delivery, and visa context.
Bolt is the Nomada editorial pick for Ghana — chosen on driver supply, foreign-card friendliness, and how reliably drivers actually accept trips. The other 2 apps below are useful as fallbacks or for specific use cases.
Most do, but it varies. Uber, Lyft, Bolt, Free Now, and Cabify reliably accept international cards. DiDi, 99, Yango, and Careem occasionally reject foreign issuers — keep Apple Pay or Google Pay as a fallback. Cash payments work in inDrive and Bolt in many markets.
It varies by airport, not country. Major hubs typically have designated app-pickup zones. Smaller airports or tourist-heavy ones (Bali Denpasar, Cancún, Naples) sometimes forbid app pickups under pressure from taxi cartels. Check the app's in-help notes for the specific airport before landing.
Major apps verify drivers and track rides in real time — significantly safer than hailing on the street in most markets. Share trip status with someone, check the license plate matches the app, and prefer pickup at well-lit areas. Solo riders can use Cabify's female-driver filter where available.
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