Minerals Income Investment Fund (MIIF) has announced that Ghana’s mineral royalty receipts recorded a significant increase in the first quarter of 2026, with total inflows rising to more than GH₵2 billion, according to new data.
The milestone represents an important performance indicator for the sub-Saharan extractive landscape, showing a steep upward trajectory in resource wealth management.
This major surge reflects the expanding fiscal capacity of the state’s mining portfolio and underlines an aggressive push toward optimization within the local extractive regime.
“The strong overall performance signals continued momentum in Ghana’s mineral revenue mobilisation efforts and reflects ongoing collaboration between regulators and industry players to improve compliance and optimise royalty collections. Performance also reinforces MIIF’s broader mandate of maximising value from Ghana’s mineral wealth while ensuring long-term benefits for the country’s economic development and future generations.”
Minerals Income Investment Fund (MIIF)
The latest data reflects continued resilience in the country’s mining sector, largely driven by strong performance in the large-scale and mid-tier gold mining segments.

The Q1 performance also signals a positive outlook for the year, following the Fund’s historic achievement of grossing over GH₵5 billion in royalty receipts in 2025, the first time such a milestone has been recorded in the history of the Fund.
Specifically, the analytical breakdown shows that total mineral royalties increased from GH₵1.43 billion in the first quarter of 2025 to GH₵2.01 billion in the corresponding period of 2026, representing a 40 per cent increase in revenue mobilization.
Furthermore, these actual collections exceeded MIIF’s first quarter 2026 forecast of GH₵1.57 billion by 28 per cent, verifying that aggressive regulatory oversight is yielding tangible cash-flow windfalls.
Sectoral Performance and Commodity Drivers
A granular review of the sub-sectors reveals that large-scale gold mining remained the biggest contributor to royalty receipts during the period under review, generating GH₵1.97 billion in the first quarter of 2026, compared to GH₵1.35 billion recorded during the same period in 2025.
This performance represents a 46 per cent year-on-year increase, exceeding its projected target of GH₵1.49 billion by 33 per cent. Analysts from Vaultz News note that this growth was driven largely by high gold prices and increased production compared to the previous year.
The sharp increase further reinforces the sector’s dominance in Ghana’s extractive industry and indicates sustained investor confidence and stronger royalty performance from major gold-producing companies.

Concurrently, the mid-tier gold mining segment also posted strong growth, with royalties surging from GH₵15.30 million in the first quarter of 2025 to GH₵25.78 million this year, representing a 69 per cent increase.
The segment also outperformed its forecast for the period by as much as 53 per cent on the back of high gold prices and, most importantly, improved compliance due to royalty monitoring and compliance efforts by the fund.
The quarry subsector (granite and limestone) equally recorded modest growth, rising from GH₵2.95 million to GH₵3.26 million within the same comparative periods. Within that group, limestone royalties grossed GH₵1.77 million, a drop from GH₵1,856,423.10 due to a reduction in production in the sector.
Conversely, some areas faced clear operational friction. While the manganese sector contributed GH₵60.97 million in the first quarter of 2025, it is expected to contribute approximately GH₵31 million for the same period in 2026.
This specific royalty shortfall is due to operational challenges principally high stripping leading to production decline and appreciation of the Ghana Cedi against the US Dollar.
For non-precious minerals, sand mining revenues remained largely flat, moving marginally from GH₵361,184 in 2025 to GH₵362,536 in 2026, while salt receipts stood at GH₵330,464.

Institutional Reforms and Compliance Frameworks
Commenting on the first quarter 2026 royalty performance, the Chief Executive Officer of the Minerals Income Investment Fund, Mrs. Justina Nelson, expressed optimism that the strong results recorded within the period will position the mining sector for another robust year, particularly if gold production and global commodity prices remain favorable.
She also noted that the “revival of the multi-agency committee aimed at strengthening the monitoring and collection of mineral royalties and other mining-related revenues for the state will help boost compliance” substantially across all active jurisdictions.
Mrs. Nelson explained that discussions at the maiden meeting of the committee focused on restoring coordination among institutions responsible for tracking royalties, production declarations, and compliance within the mining sector.
According to her, the renewed collaboration among the agencies is expected to result in a major turnaround in royalty monitoring and collection across the country’s mining industry, cutting down on revenue leakages that have historically plundered minor concessions.

Macroeconomic Implications for Ghana’s Growth Trajectory
This massive accumulation of mineral liquidity provides several structural advantages for the broader Ghanaian economy.
At a time when fiscal consolidation is paramount, an extra-budgetary cushion generated by MIIF assists in reducing the national sovereign deficit.
The primary transmission mechanism through which this influx helps the state is the stabilization of external reserves. Because gold royalties are heavily tied to international market pricing and foreign exchange values, these flows enhance the central bank’s capacity to maintain balance-of-payments viability.
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