Rural banks to transition into community banks by March 2026

Dr. Johnson Pandit Asiama, Governor - Bank of Ghana
The Bank of Ghana (BoG) has ordered a compulsory transformation of all Rural Banks into Community Banks by March 31, 2026. This marks one of the most significant structural shifts in Ghana’s microfinance landscape in decades.
The directive is part of a revised Microfinance Sector Framework introduced by the central bank to correct long-standing weaknesses in governance, capitalization and supervision across the sector, while accelerating financial inclusion at the community level.
Under the new framework, the familiar Tier 1–4 classification system has been scrapped and replaced with four operational categories: Microfinance Banks, Community Banks, Credit Unions, and Last-Mile Providers. The reforms are backed by the Banks and Specialized Deposit-Taking Institutions Act, 2016, and the Non-Bank Financial Institutions Act, 2008.
As a result of the transition, institutions formerly licensed as Rural Banks will now operate as Community Banks—licensed deposit-taking institutions expected to serve both rural and urban populations and connect more effectively to the national financial system.
The reforms also redefine the role of ARB Apex Bank Limited, which has been repositioned as a shared-services institution for the entire microfinance ecosystem. Its expanded mandate includes liquidity support, reserve management, cheque clearing, payment guarantees, digital banking platforms, inspections, training, and temporary support for distressed institutions.
While the conversion must be completed by March 31, 2026, affected banks have until December 31, 2026 to fully comply with new capital requirements. The minimum capital for Community Banks has been set at GH¢5 million, while newly established urban Community Banks will be required to raise GH¢10 million.
In addition, the Bank of Ghana has introduced changes to ownership structures to encourage local participation. Community Banks must ensure that at least 30 percent of their shares are held by individuals or groups within their communities, with caps placed on how much individuals, related parties, or corporate bodies may control. Institutions exceeding these limits are required to regularise by the end of 2026.
Banks that currently fall short of the new capital thresholds must notify the central bank by June 30, 2026 of how they intend to comply. Options include direct recapitalisation, mergers or acquisitions, or supervised transfers of assets and liabilities to stronger institutions to protect depositors.
Beyond Community Banks, the new framework introduces Microfinance Banks, which will primarily serve micro, small and medium-sized enterprises. Existing savings and loans companies and deposit-taking microfinance institutions may transition into this category, subject to meeting capital requirements of GH¢50 million for existing firms and GH¢100 million for new entrants.
Credit Unions with assets of at least GH¢60 million will come under direct Bank of Ghana supervision from the second quarter of 2026, while smaller operators such as susu collectors and village savings groups will be classified as Last-Mile Providers under delegated oversight.
The Bank of Ghana says all institutions must complete their transition into the new framework by December 31, 2026, warning that failure to meet the timelines could attract regulatory sanctions. The guidelines take immediate effect.


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