Investment · The Gambia

Working with GIEPA

Last reviewed on May 2, 2026.

If you are researching investment in The Gambia, the Gambia Investment and Export Promotion Agency — GIEPA — is one of the institutions you will run into early. This page is a plain-English orientation: what GIEPA does, how it fits into a research process, and where to look next. It is general background, not advice. Always check the latest with GIEPA itself before relying on a detail.

What GIEPA is

GIEPA is the national agency tasked with promoting investment and exports in The Gambia. It exists at the intersection of national strategy, sector promotion, and investor support. In practice, that means it does several different things at once: it talks to potential investors, it publishes guidance on doing business in the country, it administers parts of the investment-incentive framework, and it represents The Gambia at trade and investment events abroad.

For most early-stage investors, GIEPA is the natural first stop. It will not replace your need for legal counsel and accounting advice, but it will give you a single, official view of the investment landscape and help you avoid going to the wrong ministry first.

Where it fits in research

An investor moving from "interesting idea" to "concrete plan" usually goes through three rough phases.

1. Sense-making

You read country background, look at the sectors that recur in national plans, and try to understand the institutional landscape. GIEPA's published material is one of the inputs at this stage, alongside donor-funded reports, the World Bank's country diagnostics, and the kind of independent overviews you'll find on E-Gambia.

2. Engagement

Once you have a hypothesis — a sector, a possible structure, a possible location — you begin engaging with the relevant Gambian institutions. GIEPA is a good point of first contact. From there, the conversation typically branches: to the Ministry of Trade for registration policy, to the Gambia Revenue Authority on tax, to the relevant sector ministry, and to the Gambia Immigration Department if the project will require expatriate staff.

3. Execution

Specific tasks — incorporation, licences, tax registration, land matters — happen with the institutions that own them. GIEPA can help you find the right door for each, but the legal and procedural work happens elsewhere.

Areas GIEPA typically covers

The following themes appear repeatedly in GIEPA's published material and are worth understanding before you make contact:

How to make a useful first contact

GIEPA fields a wide range of enquiries, from serious investors to students writing dissertations. To get useful engagement, arrive with structure:

  1. Write a short brief. Two to three pages. Cover what you want to do, why The Gambia, what you bring (capital, technology, expertise), and what you need to confirm.
  2. State your phase. Say clearly whether you are still researching or already mid-decision. This shapes the kind of help GIEPA will offer.
  3. Be specific about sector and scale. "I want to invest in The Gambia" is too broad. "We are evaluating a 10-megawatt solar project under a build-own-operate model" is the kind of statement GIEPA can act on.
  4. Confirm the route to the next institution. Ask explicitly: which ministry, which agency, which contact, in what order.

What GIEPA does not do

Other institutions to know

The public services directory has more on the institutional landscape.

A short worked example

An investor evaluating a small agro-processing facility on the south bank of the river might run a research path like this: read GIEPA's published sector brief on agro-processing → confirm whether the proposed scale and product fit a priority category → meet GIEPA to discuss the incentive framework → engage the Ministry of Trade on registration and the relevant agriculture-sector body for technical norms → engage a local lawyer and an accountant → engage the GRA on tax registration once the entity exists → loop back to GIEPA for aftercare. The same shape works for many sectors; only the institutions in the middle change.

Common mistakes

What to read next

This page is general background. It is not legal, tax, or investment advice — see the disclaimer.