The Ghana Tourism Development Company (GTDC) is set to unveil a suite of new digital platforms and tourism products aimed at expanding and digitising Ghana’s tourism sector.
The announcement was made in a post by the Chief Executive Officer, Professor Kobby Mensah, ahead of a scheduled unveiling event on May 12, 2026, at the GTDC forecourt.
The products include GTM, a digital platform designed to connect tourism and hospitality vendors across Ghana in a centralised marketplace.
GTDC will also introduce GTIP, a digital portal providing data and profiles on investable tourism sites across the country.
Other offerings include FPMS, a Fleet Pool Management Services platform intended to support transport logistics within the tourism sector, and the Ghana Tourism Calendar, a digital event discovery and ticketing platform for concerts, festivals, nightlife events, exhibitions and tourism experiences.
The package also includes “Accra By Night,” a nightlife tourism product offering open-top bus tours of Accra, alongside structured tour operations covering heritage, cultural, eco-tourism and educational destinations such as Cape Coast Castle, Elmina Castle, Wli Falls and Mole National Park. Cross-border tours to Togo and Benin are also included.
GTDC also listed Campus Connect, a programme targeting senior high school students with exposure to tourism experiences and innovation-focused activities.
The Ghana Tourism Development Company is mandated to promote and mobilise resources for investment in tourism ventures, facilitate joint ventures with local and international investors, and provide support for small businesses within the tourism sector.
The unveiling event is scheduled for Tuesday, May 12, 2026, at 6:00 p.m. at the GTDC forecourt.
The rollout reflects a shift toward a more integrated tourism model that combines digital platforms, transport coordination and curated experiences within a connected ecosystem linking service providers, investors and visitors.
If effectively implemented, the initiatives could improve access to tourism data, strengthen coordination across the value chain and enhance Ghana’s positioning as a structured and experience-driven destination, though their impact will ultimately depend on adoption and execution beyond the launch.