Transaction Monitoring for Payment Service Banks in Ghana | YouVerify
Transaction Monitoring
Transaction Monitoring for Payment Service Banks in Ghana
ParFavour Praise
•5mins de lecture
Key Takeaways
Transaction monitoring in Ghana is a regulatory requirement, driven by the Anti-Money Laundering Act (Act 1044) and enforced by the Bank of Ghana and FIC.
Effective transaction monitoring systems must operate in real time, using risk-based rules to detect suspicious activity beyond fixed thresholds.
AML transaction monitoring requires structured workflows, including customer risk classification, scenario-based detection, and timely STR reporting within 3 working days.
Modern payment transaction monitoring relies on automation and AI, helping institutions reduce false positives, improve accuracy, and maintain audit-ready compliance.
Payment service banks and payment service providers (PSPs) in Ghana are now under stricter AML oversight. The Bank of Ghana (BoG) and Financial Intelligence Centre (FIC) require institutions to implement effective transaction monitoring systems that detect suspicious activity in real time.
Under Ghana’s Anti-Money Laundering Act, 2020 (Act 1044), institutions must monitor transactions continuously, file Suspicious Transaction Reports (STRs) within three working days, and maintain audit-ready records.
This guide explains exactly what payment service banks in Ghana must implement and how to build a transaction monitoring system that satisfies both BoG and FATF standards.
Ghana’s AML Framework and Transaction Monitoring Requirements
Through the Anti-Money Laundering Act, 2020 (Act 1044), Ghana’s AML framework is aligned with FATF standards and enforced by both the BoG and FIC. Ghana’s primary AML legislation requires all “accountable institutions," a category that includes payment service providers, mobile money operators, international money transfer operators (IMTOs), and savings and loans companies to:
Implement AML transaction monitoring on an ongoing basis
File suspicious transaction reporting (STRs) within 3 working days
Maintain records for at least 7 years
Appoint a compliance officer
Key Transaction Monitoring Thresholds in Ghana
Transaction Type
Threshold
Reporting Obligation
Cash transactions
GHS 10,000 per transaction
CTR to FIC Ghana
Cumulative cash (rolling 30 days)
GHS 30,000
CTR to FIC Ghana
International wire transfers
USD 10,000 equivalent
CTR to FIC Ghana
Mobile money single transaction
GHS 5,000 (BoG limit)
Threshold monitoring
Mobile money daily cumulative
GHS 10,000
Threshold monitoring
IMTO cross-border transfers
No minimum - risk-based
STR if suspicious
Note: Thresholds are minimum reporting floors. Ghana’s risk-based approach under Act 1044 requires PSPs to monitor transactions below these amounts when other risk indicators are present, particularly for structuring and smurfing schemes.
Why Transaction Monitoring Systems Matter in Ghana
Financial crime and fraud risk in Ghana are evolving. Mobile money fraud, cross-border cash movement, and Ponzi schemes are common risks.
Without effective transaction monitoring systems, institutions face:
Anti-money laundering (AML) transaction monitoring is the process of tracking customer transactions to identify unusual or suspicious behaviour.
It focuses on patterns, not just single transactions.
Key monitoring areas include:
Transaction frequency and velocity
Geographic inconsistencies
Sudden spikes in account activity
Agent-based transaction patterns
Cross-border payment behaviour
Modern transaction monitoring systems analyse these signals in real time to detect suspicious activity early before fraud happens.
Building an Effective Transaction Monitoring Program in Ghana
A strong transaction monitoring program in Ghana must follow a risk-based approach and reflect local fraud patterns. This means combining customer risk classification, scenario-based monitoring, and structured reporting workflows.
Step 1: Customer Risk Classification
Every institution must classify customers based on risk. This forms the foundation of effective AML transaction monitoring.
Key risk factors include:
- Geographic risk: Customers transacting across high-risk borders such as Côte d’Ivoire, Togo, or Burkina Faso
- Product risk: High-velocity mobile money accounts, IMTO wallets, and merchant accounts carry higher exposure than standard retail accounts
- Customer type risk: Agents, bulk payment processors, and import/export businesses require enhanced monitoring
- PEP status: Politically exposed persons must be identified at onboarding and reviewed regularly using local registers
This step ensures that transaction monitoring systems apply stricter controls where risk is higher.
Step 2: Scenario Configuration
Monitoring rules must reflect real transaction behaviour in Ghana. Generic global rules are not enough.
Key scenarios to implement include:
- Cash structuring: Multiple deposits over a short period that stay below GHS 10,000 but exceed thresholds cumulatively
- Rapid mobile money cycling: Funds received and quickly split across multiple recipients
- Agent transaction spikes: Sudden increase in agent activity beyond normal patterns
- IMTO round-tripping: Funds received from high-risk jurisdictions and sent back within a short period
Agent monitoring rules configured separately from retail rules
STR filing workflow documented with 3-day deadline controls
Staff AML training completed and records maintained
PEP screening tool covers Ghanaian domestic PEPs
Record retention system configured for 7-year retention
Annual programme review scheduled and MLRO accountability documented
Common Compliance Gaps to Avoid
Based on BoG examination findings and GIABA mutual evaluation reports, the most common monitoring gaps for Ghanaian payment service banks include:
1. Insufficient agent monitoring: Many PSPs apply the same monitoring rules to agents as to individual retail customers, failing to account for the elevated risk that agents represent as aggregation points for multiple third-party transactions.
2. No mobile money-specific typologies: Standard global AML monitoring templates are not calibrated for Ghana’s mobile money ecosystem. PSPs must develop Ghana-specific scenarios for MoMo-linked financial crime.
3. Failure to update thresholds for currency movement: GHS inflation has significantly changed the real value of GHS 10,000 since 2020. PSPs that have not reviewed their threshold calibrations risk missing transactions that, in purchasing power terms, represent significantly more than the nominal amount.
4. Inadequate PEP screening for domestic politicians: Global PEP databases often have incomplete coverage of Ghanaian district assembly members, regional ministers, and state-owned enterprise directors. PSPs must supplement global screening tools with local PEP reference sources.
5. No STR quality review process: FIC Ghana receives STRs of highly variable quality. STRs filed without adequate investigation notes or a clear articulation of the grounds for suspicion are difficult for FIC to action. PSPs should implement MLRO quality reviews before filing.
How Youverify Supports Transaction Monitoring in Ghana
Youverify provides a unified, FRAML AI-powered platform built to simplify transaction monitoring in Ghana for banks and payment service providers.
It enables institutions to run real-time AML transaction monitoring, detect suspicious activity instantly, and automate STR reporting to FIC Ghana without delays. Every alert, decision, and report is fully tracked, giving you audit-ready compliance at all times.
Designed for African payment systems, Youverify combines configurable rule libraries, machine learning-driven risk scoring, and seamless integration with local infrastructure. This ensures accurate payment transaction monitoring at scale while reducing false positives and operational workload.
With pre-configured rules aligned to BoG and FATF standards, Youverify helps teams move faster, stay compliant, and manage risk with confidence.
Favour Praise is a fintech and compliance researcher and writer specialising in RegTech, KYC/AML automation, and financial crime prevention across Africa and emerging markets. Her work focuses on translating complex regulatory frameworks into practical, actionable insights for banks, fintechs, and compliance teams.