Every safe journey protects lives, preserves vehicles and builds a professional driving culture across Ghana's roads.
Under Ghanaian law, driving with due care means exercising reasonable caution, full concentration, and proper consideration for every person on the road — passengers, pedestrians, motorcyclists, and other drivers.
Your eyes and mind must be on the road at all times. No phone, no distractions, no divided focus.
Reading road conditions, traffic flow, and other drivers' behaviour to make safe, correct decisions.
Knowing what is happening around your vehicle — 360 degrees — at every moment of your trip.
Predicting what other road users may do and adjusting your speed and position accordingly.
Obeying all traffic laws, road signs, and MTTD regulations is not optional — it is your legal duty.
Driving professionally isn't just about following rules — it protects everything you've worked for: your income, your passengers, your vehicle, and your freedom.
Passengers trust you completely. Safe driving earns 5-star ratings, more trips, and loyal customers — and keeps people alive.
Smooth, disciplined driving reduces wear on tyres, brakes, and suspension by up to 40%, slashing your maintenance costs.
High-rated drivers earn significantly more trips. A deactivation or accident can cost weeks of income and thousands in repairs.
Traffic violations, impoundment, and prosecution can end your career. Drive right and keep your money in your pocket.
Pedestrians, school children, motorcyclists, and elderly persons share your road. Your due care protects the most vulnerable.
Ghana's ride-hailing industry is growing. Drivers known for safety become the standard others are measured against.
Tap any card to learn the consequences and how to prevent it. Understanding these dangers is step one to eliminating them.
Under Ghana's Road Traffic Act (Act 683), these regulations are mandatory. Ignorance is not a defence before a MTTD officer or a court.
The Driver and Vehicle Licensing Authority mandates these documents and standards for all drivers operating on Ghana's roads.
Professional drivers don't just react — they anticipate, plan, and stay calm. These are the habits that separate professionals from reckless drivers.
Seasonal flooding is one of the most underestimated threats on Accra's roads. Every year, vehicles are destroyed and lives lost. Know the risks.
Just 30cm of fast-moving water can sweep a vehicle off the road. Toyota Vitz, Corolla, and low-profile cars are especially vulnerable. Floodwater hides open manholes, collapsed road sections, and extreme depths. If in doubt — turn back.
🛑 When Flooded — Never AttemptHydrostatic lock occurs when water enters the engine while running. The damage is instant, catastrophic, and irreparable — often a total write-off.
Modern cars have ECUs, ABS, and airbag sensors near the floor. Water intrusion disables brakes, safety systems, and the engine management computer.
A stalled vehicle in rising water traps passengers. Submerged door pressure can make windows and doors impossible to open. Never risk it.
Floodwater conceals open gutters, potholes, and collapsed asphalt. Even 10cm of water hides damage that destroys tyres and suspensions instantly.
Automatic transmission fluid and water do not mix. Driving through deep water can destroy an automatic gearbox costing GHS 8,000–20,000 to replace.
Accra floodwater carries sewage, industrial waste, and disease. Vehicle interiors contaminated by floodwater become health hazards for passengers.
As an Uber, Bolt, Yango, or inDrive driver in Ghana, you represent both your platform and GSC Fleet. These standards separate good drivers from exceptional ones.
"I commit to driving with due care and attention at all times. I will obey Ghana's traffic laws, protect my passengers, maintain my vehicle in roadworthy condition, respect all road users, and contribute to safer roads across Ghana. I understand that my actions behind the wheel affect lives — and I take that responsibility seriously."
10 questions covering MTTD regulations, defensive driving, flood safety, and more. See how road-safe you really are.
Save these numbers in your phone before you need them. In an emergency, every second counts.
Police Emergency Line
National Ambulance Service
Ghana National Fire Service
Stay calm. Switch on hazard lights immediately. Do not flee the scene — it is a criminal offence.
Secure the scene. Place warning triangles. Keep passengers calm and away from traffic.
Check injuries. Do not move injured persons unless there is immediate fire or flood danger.
Call 193 for ambulance and 191 for police immediately if injuries are involved.
Exchange details with all other parties — name, licence number, reg plate, insurer.
Take photos of all vehicles, road conditions, injuries, and tyre marks before moving anything.
Contact your platform (Uber/Bolt/Yango/inDrive) via the app and report the incident.
Contact GSC Fleet management immediately and follow the official incident reporting procedure.
GSC Fleet is Ghana's professional fleet management company, raising the standard of road transport through education, compliance, and excellence.
Structured training on Ghana Road Traffic laws, MTTD regulations, defensive driving, and platform-specific conduct for all GSC Fleet drivers.
Mandatory pre-trip and periodic vehicle checks ensure every GSC Fleet car meets DVLA roadworthiness standards before hitting the road.
GPS tracking, driver behaviour analytics, and regular performance reviews keep GSC Fleet drivers accountable and improving.
GSC Fleet drivers are held to the highest standards of punctuality, courtesy, vehicle cleanliness, and passenger care.
Every GSC Fleet vehicle is equipped with functional seat belts, maintained safety systems, and clean interiors — no compromise.
Actively collaborating with Uber, Bolt, Yango, inDrive, DVLA, MTTD, and NRSA to promote responsible, lawful ride-hailing in Ghana.
"At GSC Fleet, we believe that professional driving is not just a job — it is a responsibility to Ghana. Every safe trip completed by a GSC Fleet driver is our contribution to a better, safer road culture for this generation and the next."