As part of ongoing reforms to strengthen Ghana’s financial ecosystem, the Bank of Ghana (BoG) has converted all Rural Banks into Community Banks, a move designed to deepen inclusive finance and reposition the microfinance sector for sustainable growth.
In a statement issued on June 17, 2026, the central bank said the move is in line with the Revised Microfinance Sector Framework, 2026, which redesignates the Rural Banking Sector, also known as the Rural and Community Banking Sector, as the Community Banking Sector.
As a result, all existing Rural Banks will now operate as Community Banks and are required to complete statutory name changes, corporate rebranding and other regulatory alignments by December 31, 2026.
According to the Bank of Ghana, the conversion marks a strategic milestone in the country’s microfinance sector reforms and is expected to usher in a new phase of community-level financial intermediation. The transition also coincides with the 50th anniversary of rural banking in Ghana, providing what the central bank describes as an opportunity to position the subsector for its next stage of growth.
Rural banking was introduced in 1976 by the Government of Ghana and the Bank of Ghana to expand access to financial services in underserved communities and integrate rural populations into the formal financial system. Over the past five decades, the sector has evolved into a key pillar of Ghana’s banking industry and financial inclusion agenda.
The subsector currently comprises 147 licensed institutions operating through approximately 1,000 branches nationwide and serving more than eight million customers. The Bank of Ghana attributed the sector’s growth to sustained policy support, a development-focused regulatory framework and the unique model of community ownership that underpins many of the institutions.
The central bank said the reclassification is intended to reposition Community Banks as a modern banking segment capable of deepening access to financial services in both rural and urban communities while enhancing their integration into Ghana’s broader financial architecture.
The announcement signals a new chapter for one of Ghana’s most extensive financial networks, with regulators expecting the transformation to strengthen the sector’s role in promoting inclusive economic growth and expanding access to banking services across the country.



































