Fifty cereal-based products intended for infants and young children were purchased at retail level across Greater Accra Region in Accra Metropolis from June-September 2013. The samples included rice-based, corn-based, wheat-based, oat-based, millet-based, legume-based and mixed grain. Extraction procedure involving solvent mixture of acetonitrile-water followed by immunoaffinity column clean-up step and HPLC with fluorescence detection and post-column derivatization (Kobra cell system) were used. Of the processed cereal-based food samples tested, 72% were contaminated with all four types of Aflatoxin, that is, 0.18-23.27 ng g(-1) for Aflatoxin B-1, from 0.08 to 2.62 ng g(-1) for B-2, from 0.07 to 6.18 ng g(-1) for G(1), and from 0.25 to 3.25 ng g(-1) for G(2) Total Aflatoxins (total AF) also ranged from 0.18 +/- 0.02-25.93 +/- 0.29 mu gkg-(1). Overall, the mean Aflatoxin values recorded in the rice-based, corn-based, wheat-based, millet-based, legume-based and mixed grain samples were 0.59 +/- 0.02, 3.58 +/- 0.02, 3A6 +/- 0.11, 1.49 +/- 0.02, 3.29 +/- 0.12 and 8.29 +/- 0.13 respectively. The results showed that 96% of the processed foods intended for infants contained AFB(1) levels higher than the European Union permissible limits of 0.1 mu g.kg-(1) whilst 52% of the cereal-based foods exceeded the EU maximum limit of 2 mu g/kg for AFB(1) and 4 mu g/kg for total Aflatoxins.