BoG converts all rural banks into community banks

The Bank of Ghana (BoG) has converted all Rural Banks into Community Banks as part of reforms aimed at expanding financial 33services to both rural and urban populations.
The announcement was made in a statement issued by the Communications Department of the Bank of Ghana on June 17, 2026, outlining new regulatory requirements for the sector’s transition.
The central bank said the conversion forms part of the implementation of the revised Microfinance Sector Framework and marks a significant shift in the evolution of community-level financial intermediation in the country.
Under the new arrangement, the institutions will retain their community-owned model but will have an expanded mandate to serve both rural and urban populations, unlike the previous rural banking structure which was largely restricted to designated farming, fishing and semi-rural communities.
The Bank of Ghana has directed all existing banks in the subsector to complete statutory name changes, corporate rebranding and other regulatory adjustments by the end of December 2026.
“This conversion represents a strategic milestone under the ongoing microfinance sector reform and is intended to usher in a new phase of community-level financial intermediation,” the statement said.
The regulator explained that the move also coincides with the 50th anniversary of rural banking in Ghana, describing it as an opportune time to transition the subsector into a new era.
Rural banking was introduced in 1976 by the Government and the Bank of Ghana to broaden access to financial services and integrate rural communities into the national financial system.
Over the years, the sector has grown into a key pillar of Ghana’s banking industry and financial inclusion agenda.
According to the statement, the subsector currently comprises 147 licensed institutions operating through nearly 1,000 branches nationwide and serving more than eight million customers.
The central bank attributed the sector’s growth to sustained policy support, a development-oriented regulatory framework and the strong relationship between community ownership and customer participation.
The Bank of Ghana said the reforms would position Community Banks as modern deposit-taking institutions capable of integrating both rural and urban populations into the national financial ecosystem while creating opportunities for greater scalability.
“Through this conversion, the Bank of Ghana is repositioning the Community Banking sector as a modern banking segment to deepen inclusive finance in both rural and urban communities and integrate them into the national financial architecture,” the statement added.
The central bank expressed confidence that the transition would strengthen Ghana’s financial inclusion efforts and prepare the sector to meet evolving economic and development needs.


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BoG converts all rural banks into community banks