Withdraw GH500 from MTN MoMo Ghana - the family-cashflow withdrawal
Withdrawing GH₵500 from an MTN MoMo Ghana wallet at an agent costs GH₵5 - effective rate 1.00% of the amount withdrawn. No e-levy since April 2025; the only cost is the operator fee. Here is the band you fall in, the band-specific consolidation tip, and the typical use case at this amount.
The detailed math
- Amount withdrawn: GH₵500
- Operator fee (band GH₵50-2,000 (1%)): GH₵5
- Government tax (e-levy): GH₵0 (repealed 2 April 2025)
- Total deducted from balance: GH₵5
- Effective rate (fee ÷ amount withdrawn): 1.00%
On your MTN SMS, the detail appears line by line. If the agent demands extra cash beyond what is deducted, it is prohibited overcharging - see our agent charges page.
The typical use case at GH₵500
GH₵500 is the family cashflow withdrawal: a week of household expenses for a Ghanaian middle-class urban family, a one-off rent contribution to extended family, school uniform shopping at term start, or a moderate hospital bill. It is the band where consolidation tips start to bite materially.
The math here is sobering. Four GH₵500 withdrawals across a month cost GH₵20 total - the SAME as one GH₵2,000 withdrawal (which sits at the cap edge). So if your monthly cash need adds up to around GH₵2,000, one consolidated withdrawal is the breakeven; below, four GH₵500s is the same; above, the cap-edge GH₵2,001 withdrawal is the clear win at GH₵20 flat for the next GH₵18,000 of cash.
GH₵500 is also the band where the diaspora-remittance pattern becomes visible. A Ghanaian abroad sending GH₵500 weekly to family means the family receives GH₵500 on MoMo, then either spends it via MoMoPay (free) or withdraws (GH₵5.00 fee). The withdrawal-vs-MoMoPay decision at GH₵500/week scales to GH₵260/year in withdrawal fees - about a month's family grocery budget - that disappears if the family stays MoMo-native.
The tip specific to this band
At GH₵500 the fee is GH₵5.00 (1%). The antechamber of the cap - still in the percentage band, but at an amount where consolidation starts to be obvious. For GH₵1,000 (double) the fee is GH₵10 (no jump). For GH₵2,000 the fee is GH₵20 and that's the cap - above that you ALWAYS pay GH₵20.
Keeping money on the wallet - the zero-fee option
On this withdrawal you pay GH₵5. If the money does not need to be in cash, keeping the balance on MoMo and paying via MoMoPay (*170*2#), wallet-to-bank (*170*8#), or P2P transfer avoids the whole fee. For many everyday uses - supermarkets, schools, hospitals, utility bills - that is now possible in Ghana in 2026.