Close

Ghana’s shoppers return—warily: Q1 2026 FMCG performance

logo

logo



Ghana’s consumer economy is stirring back to life. But it is doing so gingerly.

Fresh data from Maverick Research, which tracks over 15,000 products across 60 consumer categories nationwide, shows that the country’s fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) sector grew by 15% in value and 6% in volume in the first quarter of 2026 . On the face of it, that looks like a solid rebound. In reality, it reflects a more tentative recovery: prices are doing much of the heavy lifting, while demand is only slowly returning.

After a bruising period of high inflation and shrinking purchasing power, Ghana’s consumers are re-entering the market—but not with abandon. The result is an economy caught between stabilisation and fragility.

Necessity comes first

The pattern of recovery is telling. Food has emerged as the undisputed driver of growth, accounting for the bulk of both value and volume gains. Staples such as edible oil, milk and noodles are buoyant, as households prioritise the essentials of daily living.

Yet even here, something subtler is at work. Despite rising prices, some discretionary food items continue to grow. Consumers, it seems, are unwilling to forgo certain small comforts. Call it “affordable indulgence”: modest treats that survive even in lean times.

Green shoots, not a bloom

Elsewhere, the recovery is patchier. Non-alcoholic beverages are showing early signs of life, particularly in volume terms. Growth in segments such as water suggests that consumption is normalising—slowly.

Still, the category remains one of the most exposed to economic pressure. Beverages are, by nature, discretionary. When incomes are squeezed, they are often among the first to be trimmed.

Home and personal care tells a similar story. On the surface, the segment appears flat. Beneath that, however, essentials such as laundry detergents are recovering, while more discretionary items—beauty and grooming products—continue to languish.

The conclusion is hard to avoid: Ghana’s consumers are spending again, but only where they must.

A more calculating consumer

This spending pattern underlines the emergence of a different kind of shopper—more deliberate, more disciplined.

Households are still contending with the aftershocks of inflation. Though price pressures are easing, purchasing power has yet to fully recover. Consumers are responding by simplifying their baskets: fewer items, more essentials, and a relentless focus on value.

“Consumers are coming back, but cautiously,” says Ato Micah, managing principal of Maverick Research. “They are not returning to old habits—they are redefining them. Affordability is still the single biggest decision driver.”

This shift is visible everywhere. Smaller pack sizes are gaining traction. High-frequency products are outperforming. Non-essential purchases are being deferred.

In short, Ghana’s consumers are no longer in survival mode—but nor are they spending freely.

Growth, but of a particular kind

The structure of growth matters as much as its pace. The gap between value and volume expansion points to a recovery that is still price-led.

That is both a strength and a risk. On the one hand, firms have retained pricing power in essential categories. On the other, sustained price increases could eventually dampen demand if incomes fail to keep up.

For now, companies are walking a fine line: pushing prices where they can, protecting volumes where they must.  Demand is returning, but unevenly. Essential categories are leading; discretionary ones lag. Confidence is improving, but slowly.

The contest shifts to execution

For businesses, the implications are clear enough. Strategy matters—but execution will matter more.

Success will hinge on getting the basics right: pricing, pack sizes, and distribution. Firms that can deliver affordability while maintaining availability—particularly in traditional retail channels—will have the edge.

At the same time, there is an opportunity to rebuild. As consumers begin to return, even tentatively, brands have a chance to re-establish relevance and trust, not just compete on price.  For now, the verdict is best expressed with restraint:  Ghana’s shoppers are back—but they are watching their wallets. Closely.

Ato Micah

Building Data Infrastructure for African Markets | Managing Principal at Maverick Research 

About Maverick Research: Maverick Research is a leading Africa-based market research and analytics firm specializing in FMCG retail measurement and consumer insights. Its retail audit platform tracks over 15,000 SKUs monthly across more than 60 product categories, covering key urban and regional markets in Ghana. The audit is built on a nationally representative panel of traditional trade outlets—including neighborhood stores, open markets, kiosks, and mini-shops—providing robust insights on market size, brand performance, distribution, and retail dynamics. Maverick also operates across multiple West African markets, including Côte d’Ivoire, Cameroon, and Senegal.

DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.

DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.


Source: www.myjoyonline.com
scroll to top