
Audio By Carbonatix
Ghana’s capital city, Accra, is the second most expensive city in the world in terms of the property price to income ratio, according to Numbeo.
Numbeo, a crowd-sourced global database of reported consumer prices, perceived crime rates, quality of health care, and other statistics, explained that the Price to Income Ratio is the basic measure for apartment purchase affordability.
“It is generally calculated as the ratio of median apartment prices to median familial disposable income, expressed as years of income,” the site stated.

This comes amidst agitations about the city's high cost of property prices, contributing to the #FixTheCountry Movement.
Accra is ahead of Hong Kong (Hong Kong), Shenzhen (China), Moscow (Russia), Paris (France) as well as many other world-class cities.

In the United States of America, Memphis is the most affordable city per property price to income ratio in the world.
Numbeo also revealed that Accra has the world’s highest Mortgage percentage income ratio, followed closely by Buenos Aires (Argentina) and Tehran (Iran) in second and third place, respectively.
Mortgage as Percentage of Income is a ratio of the actual monthly cost of the mortgage to take-home family income.
“Average monthly salary is used to estimate family income. It assumes 100% mortgage is taken on 20 years for the house (or apt) of 90 square meters which price per square meter is the average price in the city centre and outside of city centre,” the site explained.

Memphis once again had the lowest Mortgage as a percentage of income to ratio.
Meanwhile, Accra has the lowest loan affordability in the world.
“Loan Affordability Index is an inverse of mortgage as a percentage of income,” the site said.
This means it is costlier to access a loan in Accra compared to other cities, including Lagos (Nigeria), Kabul (Afghanistan), Sao Paolo (Brazil) and Stockholm (Sweden) etc.

Numbeo is a crowd-sourced global database of reported consumer prices, perceived crime rates, health care quality, and other statistics.
This year it collected data from 482 cities across the world.
Latest Stories
-
Prudential Life settles GH¢100,000 medical bills under its PRUCares Valentine Experience Initiative
5 hours -
Wa West Picnic: Peter Lanchene Toobu champions peace, health and unity in landmark celebration
5 hours -
Dr Mensah Market flooded after downpour in Kumasi
5 hours -
Armed men reportedly storm Adjen Kotoku Onion Market amid tensions
6 hours -
Tecco Mensah writes: Why football fans must look beyond statistics
7 hours -
Police recover stolen Honda CR-V in Kumasi within 48 hours
7 hours -
Apetorku Gbodzi 2026 Festival opens in Dagbamete with development focus
8 hours -
President Mahama arrives in Lyon to co-chair One Health Summit
8 hours -
Beverly View Plus Hotel draws crowds amid coastal Easter rush in Volta
8 hours -
Maiden Zongo Festival held in Wa amid calls to tackle drug abuse among the youth
8 hours -
FDA warns of fake HIV test kits on Ghanaian market
9 hours -
Africa urged to build resilient health systems as donor support tightens
9 hours -
Easter gesture: Ablakwa settles medical bills for 85 North Tongu constituents
11 hours -
Africa must harness its population strength—Titus-Glover
11 hours -
Visa-free access doesn’t mean unlimited stay – Lom Ahlijah
11 hours