Ghana has taken another significant step towards restoring its economic stability after successfully completing the exchange of the remaining Savings and Development Economic Recovery Agreement (SADEREA) Notes, bringing the country’s external debt restructuring programme to its final stage.
The Ministry of Finance announced that the transaction was settled on Monday, July 13, 2026, with a value date of July 10, describing the development as the final outstanding element of Ghana’s sovereign bonded debt restructuring.
According to the Ministry, the successful exchange represents a major milestone in the government’s ongoing efforts to stabilise the economy following years of mounting debt pressures and restricted access to international financial markets.
“The exchange brings Ghana to the final stage of its external debt restructuring, marking a major milestone in the country’s economic recovery and resolving the last outstanding component of its sovereign bonded debt restructuring,” the Ministry said.
The SADEREA Notes are 12.5 per cent Senior Secured Amortising Bonds issued to finance capital projects within Ghana’s health sector.
The Ministry disclosed that the bonds were initially issued at a value of US$253.2 million, with an outstanding principal balance of approximately US$117.8 million as of January 2026 before the exchange was completed.
Officials believe the latest development reinforces government’s broader strategy to restore fiscal discipline, strengthen confidence among investors and place the economy on a more sustainable path.
“The completion of this exchange underscores the government’s commitment to restoring debt sustainability, strengthening investor confidence, and maintaining macroeconomic stability,” the Ministry stated.
The Finance Ministry added that it would continue implementing prudent debt management and sound public financial management policies to safeguard Ghana’s long-term economic outlook.
The latest achievement forms part of Ghana’s wider debt restructuring programme, launched to ease the country’s debt burden and rebuild fiscal sustainability after prolonged economic challenges driven by high public debt and limited access to global capital markets.




























