Common questions
Market days, the queens, units, water cuts, floods, Apoo and how news travels — short answers with dates.
Short answers to the questions people actually ask about Techiman — the market, the water, the rains, the festival. Dates are given wherever dates matter.
When are the market days?
Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, every week. Thursday was historically the single market day; the market outgrew it. The big wholesale movement — trucks loading and unloading — happens across these three days, and the whole town runs on that rhythm: lorry parks fill, guesthouses fill.
How is the market organised?
By commodity. Since the late 1960s each major trade — yam, maize, fish, cassava, palm oil, cloth — has had its own association headed by an elected queen. The market queens are the market's institution: they organise their sections, mediate between farmers and sellers, and settle disputes. If you want to start trading in a commodity, that commodity's association is where you begin.
What do the units mean — bag, bowl, crate?
There is no single unit. Maize moves in 100 kg bags at wholesale; tomatoes move in crates; yam is commonly counted by the hundred tubers; smaller quantities go by the bowl. The one safe rule: name the unit before you name the price.
How do I get to Techiman, and what are the fares?
Techiman sits where the trunk roads from Kumasi, Sunyani, Wa and Tamale meet, on the N10 — that junction is why the market exists at this scale. Kumasi is about 65 miles away, Sunyani about 32. Passenger fares from the lorry parks are set by the transport unions and change in step jumps, sometimes more than once a year, so we do not publish numbers that would quickly be wrong. Ask the fare at the station before boarding.
Why does the piped water go off for days at a time?
Techiman's piped water is treated from the Tano River. When illegal mining (galamsey) upstream sends heavy sediment down, treatment cannot cope and supply stops — outages of five consecutive days have been reported in the Tano basin service area. There is no published outage schedule; restoration news arrives by radio, so keep Classic 91.9 or Akina 100.9 on.
Which areas flood in the rainy season?
After homes were submerged in October 2022, the assembly named five flood-prone communities in Techiman South: Anyinabrem, New Onyinasi, Twimia-Kuase, Twimia-Nkwanta and Nana Abena Market. In Techiman North, Aworano's only access road has flooded after as little as an hour of rain (reported 2025). The wet seasons run roughly April–July and September–October.
What is the Apoo festival?
Techiman's signature festival, held around April–May each year. Its distinctive feature is ritual licence: processions in which ordinary people air grievances and direct pointed, poetic criticism at leaders — chiefs included — as a public cleansing. Priests and priestesses dance in raffia doso skirts with white clay body paint, and families host kin who come home for the week. The 2026 edition was formally launched in January 2026.
Where do I go in a medical emergency?
Holy Family Hospital — the Catholic teaching hospital that serves as the regional referral centre, with about 330 beds and a 24-hour Accident and Emergency Centre. For ambulance, police or fire, call 112, the national emergency number; it is toll-free on every network. The hospital's verified numbers are on the Who to call page.
How does news actually travel here?
By FM radio first, then WhatsApp and Facebook. Classic 91.9 FM and Akina 100.9 FM are Techiman-based, and a cluster of other local stations broadcasts alongside them. There is no local newspaper or news website — market prices, water outages and civic notices all move through radio phone-ins and shared posts.
What happened to the market in 2025 — is it open now?
Two fires (12–13 January and 9 February 2025) and a sudden demolition (around 19 May 2025). The market is open — traders rebuilt within weeks of the January fire. A full rehabilitation was announced in September 2025 but has no published schedule. The Market status page tracks all of this with dates.
Who trades at Techiman market?
Buyers and sellers from all over Ghana, and from Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger and Côte d'Ivoire — it is one of West Africa's largest food markets. Trading is largely run by women, organised through the commodity queens. Bono Twi is the home language, with Asante Twi, Hausa and northern Ghanaian languages all in the mix on market days.