Ghana and Nigeria are the two largest anglophone economies in West Africa and host large bilateral business and professional communities โ€” with active movement of professionals, entrepreneurs, and skilled workers between the two countries. Both countries have significant UK and US diasporas that engage with both markets. From a tax perspective, Nigeria appears more competitive with a 24% top rate compared to Ghana's 35%. However, the effective comparison is more nuanced: Nigeria's Consolidated Relief Allowance (CRA) โ€” 20% of gross income plus NGN 200,000 โ€” significantly reduces taxable income, bringing Nigeria's effective rate for middle-income earners well below the nominal top rate. Ghana's SSNIT contribution (5.5% employee) builds defined pension entitlement, while Nigeria's 8% pension contribution goes to individual Retirement Savings Accounts (RSAs) with designated Pension Fund Administrators. Both countries have faced currency volatility (GHS and NGN both depreciated significantly 2022โ€“2024), though the GHS stabilisation effort post-2023 and Nigeria's 2023 FX reform have created different trajectories. Both countries tax residents on worldwide income; both have diaspora communities seeking efficient structures for managing UK/US-sourced income while maintaining African connections.

By Daniel

Daniel has spent 5+ years researching tax systems across 95+ countries and all US states to make tax comparison accessible to everyone. For corrections, contact us.

Last Updated: April 2026

The Big Picture

๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ญ Ghana

0โ€“35%

GRA Income Tax; SSNIT 5.5% Employee

Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) taxes residents at progressive rates 0โ€“35%. Tax-free threshold: GHS 4,380/year (2024). SSNIT (Social Security and National Insurance Trust): 5.5% employee, 13% employer. Ghana taxes residents on worldwide income. Non-residents taxed at 20% flat on Ghana-source income. Withholding taxes on dividends 8%, interest 8%, rent 8% for non-residents.

๐Ÿ‡ณ๐Ÿ‡ฌ Nigeria

7โ€“24% (PITA)

PITA Personal Income Tax; Pension 8% Employee

Nigeria's Personal Income Tax Act (PITA) imposes progressive rates 7โ€“24% on taxable income. Consolidated Relief Allowance: NGN 200,000 or 1% of gross income (whichever is higher) + 20% of gross income. Pension: 8% employee contribution to RSA (Retirement Savings Account). Lagos State residence adds no additional income tax โ€” state rates are fixed by PITA. Non-residents taxed at flat 10% on Nigeria-source income.

Typical Annual Savings

At $30,000 / GHS 370,000 / NGN 45,000,000 income:

Varies โ€” Nigeria effective rate lower at most income levels

At equivalent $30,000 annual income: Ghana effective rate ~22% (after SSNIT + income tax). Nigeria effective rate ~14% (after CRA deductions). Nigeria appears more competitive due to CRA relief. However, Ghana offers better economic stability, rule of law, and property rights โ€” factors that may outweigh the tax differential.

Tax Savings by Income Level

IncomeGH TaxNG TaxSavings10-Year
GHS 120,000 / NGN 18M / ~$8,000 ~GHS 17,600 Ghana (14.7% effective)~NGN 1,440,000 Nigeria (8% effective after CRA)Nigeria ~7% lower effective rateGhana SSNIT builds defined pension; NG RSA is individual account
GHS 370,000 / NGN 45M / ~$25,000 ~GHS 101,000 Ghana (27.3% effective)~NGN 6,750,000 Nigeria (15% effective after CRA)Nigeria ~12% lower effective rate at this levelGhana: SSNIT 5.5% + income tax; Nigeria: pension 8% + 15%
GHS 740,000 / NGN 90M / ~$50,000 ~GHS 240,000 Ghana (32.4% effective)~NGN 17,000,000 Nigeria (18.9% effective)Nigeria ~13.5% lower effective rateFX and inflation differentials may reverse comparison
GHS 1,480,000 / NGN 180M / ~$100,000 ~GHS 502,000 Ghana (33.9% effective)~NGN 36,000,000 Nigeria (20% effective)Nigeria ~14% lower effective at top incomeBoth countries: diaspora income treatment complex
๐Ÿ’ก

CountryTaxCalc.com is reader-supported. When you use our partner links, we may earn a commission at no cost to you. Learn more about our affiliate partnerships

Best GBP to GHS/NGN Rate

Wise

โ˜… 4.3 Trustpilot  ยท  287,413 reviews

Sending money between the UK, US, Ghana, or Nigeria? Wise offers real exchange rates on GBP/USD-to-GHS/NGN transfers โ€” transparent fees with no hidden margins. Trusted by millions of West African diaspora.

โš  For currency exchange only โ€” not a bank account replacement.

Send Money to Ghana or Nigeria โ†’
Global Payroll

Deel

โ˜… 4.7 Trustpilot  ยท  8,728 reviews

Contractor or remote worker between Africa and the UK/US? Deel manages cross-border employment, compliance, and multi-currency payouts in 150+ countries including Ghana and Nigeria.

โš  For employers and companies only โ€” not for individual freelancers or employees.

Get Paid Across Borders โ†’

Ghana Pros and Cons

โœ… Pros

  • More stable economic environment post-2023 IMF support program
  • Rule of law and property rights stronger than Nigeria (World Bank governance scores)
  • SSNIT pension: guaranteed defined benefit entitlement based on years of contribution
  • Relatively lower currency volatility vs Nigeria post-2023
  • Strong financial sector; Accra is a growing fintech hub

โŒ Cons

  • 35% top income tax rate โ€” higher than Nigeria, South Africa, most African peers
  • SSNIT 5.5% employee adds to total tax burden
  • GHS has depreciated significantly; purchasing power of cedi-denominated savings eroded
  • VAT 15% + 2.5% NHIL + 1% GETFL = effective 18.5% consumption tax
  • Smaller economy limits high-salary opportunities vs Nigeria for many sectors

Nigeria Pros and Cons

โœ… Pros

  • 24% top income tax rate; effective rates lower due to CRA deduction
  • Larger economy โ€” more high-paying opportunities in Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt
  • 8% pension contribution to individual RSA โ€” portable and individually owned
  • Pioneer status and tax holiday available for qualifying businesses
  • Oil & gas and fintech sectors offer very high compensation packages

โŒ Cons

  • NGN depreciated 70%+ from 2023 FX reform โ€” naira savings severely eroded
  • Complex compliance; multiple state and federal tax obligations
  • Infrastructure challenges add indirect business costs
  • Stamp duties, state levies, and informal levies add to effective burden
  • Political and security risk in some regions

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Which country is better for African professionals โ€” Ghana or Nigeria?

The answer depends on your industry and priorities. Nigeria offers larger absolute opportunities in finance (Zenith, GTBank, Stanbic), technology (Flutterwave, Paystack, Andela), and oil/gas โ€” Lagos is one of Africa's most dynamic business cities. Ghana offers a more stable regulatory environment, better governance scores, and is more attractive for regional headquarters of multinationals (Accra hosts many). Tax-wise, Nigeria is more competitive on effective rates for most income levels. For diaspora professionals returning from UK or US: Ghana's Year of Return initiative and generally more straightforward immigration have made Accra particularly popular for returnees. For West African fintech entrepreneurs: Lagos's ecosystem depth is unmatched.

Q: How are Ghanaian and Nigerian diaspora in the UK taxed on African income?

UK tax residents are taxed on worldwide income โ€” including Ghana and Nigeria-source income (rental, dividends, business income). Both Ghana and Nigeria have Double Taxation Agreements with the UK that prevent double taxation: taxes paid in Ghana or Nigeria on the same income receive a Foreign Tax Credit in the UK. Ghana dividends withheld at 8% and Nigeria dividends withheld at 10% can generally be credited against UK dividend tax. However, the UK's non-domicile ('non-dom') rules historically benefited many West African diaspora with non-UK domicile โ€” these rules are changing from April 2025, with the new Foreign Income and Gains (FIG) regime replacing the remittance basis for new arrivals (first 4 years of UK residence: foreign income exempt; after 4 years, worldwide taxation applies). Speak to a UK tax adviser familiar with Ghana/Nigeria treaty positions.

Related Comparisons

Effective Tax Rate by CountryTax Burden by CountryZero Income Tax Countries