Technology & Markets
Accra Market Watch: New AI Platform Pierces Ghana's Property Fog
A property intelligence startup is doing what decades of estate agents could not — give buyers a single, defensible price.
In a market where a three-bedroom house in East Legon can cost anywhere between $180,000 and $400,000 for identical properties on the same street, a Ghanaian technology startup is using satellite imagery, machine learning, and local community data to do what decades of estate agents could not: give buyers a single, defensible number.
Asta Homes, a property intelligence platform built on Google Cloud infrastructure, launched its full beta service in Greater Accra in early 2026, offering what the company calls a Lending Signal Radar — a composite AI score that tells prospective buyers, renters, and institutional lenders not just what a property costs, but whether that cost is justified, and what risks it carries.
"We designed the platform for the buyer who has been burned before. The person who paid a flood surcharge because nobody told them the land sits in an EPA exclusion zone. The person who found out on moving day that the 'verified' listing was rented to three other families simultaneously." — Asta Homes, Founder
The platform's AI layer — powered by Google's Gemini API — synthesises factors including historical flood data from the Hydrological Services Department, proximity scores to major employment corridors, verified transaction data from the Lands Commission, and crowd-sourced community feedback. The output is a plain-English summary: a verdict that reads less like a financial prospectus and more like advice from a trusted friend who happens to be a data scientist.
A Metered Intelligence Layer for Institutions
For institutional partners — mortgage lenders, insurance underwriters, and development finance institutions — Asta offers a metered API service the company calls GHS Metering, where each AI-generated risk assessment carries a per-query fee that scales with complexity. Climate risk reports for coastal properties carry premium pricing. Standard yield estimates for mid-market rental properties are commoditised.
The approach puts Asta in a crowded but largely shallow field of African property portals. Unlike listing aggregators that compete primarily on inventory volume, Asta is betting that the decisive advantage in the market lies not in how many properties it shows, but in how much it can tell you about each one.
Market Context
Accra's property market has grown at an estimated compound annual rate exceeding 12% since 2018, driven by diaspora investment, urbanisation, and constrained formal supply. Yet formal transaction records remain sparse, title disputes endemic, and pricing opacity severe. A 2024 survey by the Ghana Real Estate Developers Association found that 73% of first-time buyers reported receiving materially inaccurate information during a property search.
Asta confirmed early access agreements with three Tier 1 Ghanaian commercial banks and two international development finance intermediaries, though declined to provide current user numbers.