Ghana Launches Digital Platform to Regulate Courier and Logistics Sector

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The government has unveiled iCOLMS-GH, a digital licensing and compliance system for the country’s courier and logistics industry, with a hard enforcement deadline of April 1.

Communications Minister Samuel Nartey George said the launch fulfils a promise made after a controversial August 2025 crackdown in which hundreds of motorbikes were seized in a joint PCSRC-Ghana Police operation.

The government halted that enforcement and pledged a digital-first approach instead.

What iCOLMS-GH does

  • Enables courier companies and individual riders to apply for, renew, and verify their regulatory status fully online
  • Integrates with Ghana.GOV and the National Identification Authority
  • Allows consumers to verify the legitimacy of any courier or rider before handing over a delivery
  • Gives the regulator real-time monitoring of operators

Why it matters

The platform addresses a regulatory vacuum that has allowed unregistered operators to undermine legitimate courier businesses and erode consumer trust in e-commerce deliveries.

Key dates

  • March 12 – March 31: Grace period for all operators to register and onboard
  • April 1: Enforcement resumes nationwide; Ghana Police and PCSRC task forces deploy

The bottom line: The government is framing iCOLMS certification as a baseline requirement for operating in Ghana’s growing logistics sector — not an optional credential. Operators who don’t register in the next 19 days face regulatory sanctions.


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