Fetu Afahye – Cape Coast
Cape Coast doesn’t just do castles – it throws one of the best festivals in Ghana! Fetu Afahye is a lively celebration meant to cleanse the town and pray for a good year. The whole city turns into a big, joyful party.
There’s a durbar of chiefs (aka big cultural parade), traditional war dances, and so much red-and-white fashion it feels like a runway. Plus, Cape Coast is by the sea – so you get festival vibes and beach sunsets.
📍 Where: Cape Coast
🗓️ When: First Saturday in September
🔥 Vibe: Bold, colorful, energetic – perfect for first-timers
Aboakyere Festival – Winneba
This one is wild – literally. The Aboakyere Festival in Winneba is one of the most unique traditional festivals in Ghana, and definitely a must for your bucket list. Two Asafo warrior groups compete to capture a live antelope with their bare hands as an offering to their gods.
Yes, you read that right. A whole antelope. And the energy? INSANE. Drumming, chanting, traditional war songs, and a colorful parade follow the hunt. The group that catches the antelope first becomes the town’s heroes for the year. 🔥
It’s dramatic. It’s historic. And it’s like nothing you’ve ever seen before.
📍 Where: Winneba, Central Region
🗓️ When: First weekend of May
🐐 Vibe: Competitive, spiritual, and full of adrenaline
🎨 Chale Wote Street Art Festival – Accra
Okay, okay – this one isn’t exactly traditional in the ancestral sense, but it’s so lit we had to include it. Held every August in Jamestown, Accra’s oldest district, Chale Wote is where art meets tradition meets Afro-futurism.
Picture this: the streets are filled with painted faces, giant murals, spoken word performances, dancers, fashion parades, and fire-breathing artists (yes, really 🔥). You can’t help but dance. It’s a creative explosion and a perfect mix of old-meets-new Ghana.
📍 Where: Jamestown, Accra
🗓️ When: August
🎨 Vibe: Street art meets culture and freedom of expression