Ghana Cassava Processing Profit Calculator

Calculate the profitability of processing cassava into Garri, HQCF, Cassava Chips in Ghana. Full cost breakdown with local prices, labour rates, and equipment ROI.

🏭 5 Pathways GHS prices pre-filled 📈 ROI & Payback Period
🏭 Section 1: Processing Setup
💰 Section 2: Prices & Revenue
Pre-filled with typical Ghana market price. Adjust for your location.
📋 Section 3: Other Costs
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NET PROFIT PER BATCH
📈 Profit & Loss Summary
📊 Revenue vs Total Cost
Costs Profit Loss
🔍 Key Metrics
📝 Processing Steps & Labour Breakdown
⚙️ Equipment & Investment
🏭 Why Process Cassava in Ghana?
About cassava processing in Ghana: Loading...
+ Why does cassava spoil so fast?

Fresh cassava undergoes Post-Harvest Physiological Deterioration (PPD) within 24–48 hours of harvest — the roots turn blue-black and become inedible. This is the #1 reason cassava must be processed quickly. Processing extends shelf life from 2 days to 6–12+ months.

+ What is the best pathway for small-scale farmers?

For low-capital entry, cassava chips and garri (in West Africa) have the lowest equipment requirements. A basic garri setup costs USD 100–200 and can pay back within weeks. Semi-mechanised garri or HQCF production is ideal for groups of 5–10 farmers pooling resources.

+ What is HQCF and who buys it?

High Quality Cassava Flour (HQCF) is unfermented, white, neutral-smelling flour that substitutes 10–40% of wheat flour in bread, biscuits and pasta. Industrial bakeries and food manufacturers are the buyers. Quality standards: moisture <12%, HCN <10 ppm, neutral odour. A flash dryer is required.

Price data for Ghana: FAO, IITA cassava post-harvest reports, regional market surveys 2024–2025. For planning only — verify local prices before investing.