The Bank of Ghana (BoG) has announced the conversion of all Rural and Community Banks into Community Banks as part of sweeping reforms aimed at expanding access to financial services across both rural and urban communities.
The move, outlined in a statement issued by the Bank’s Communications Department on June 17, 2026, forms part of the implementation of the revised Microfinance Sector Framework and is expected to reshape community-level banking in Ghana.
According to the central bank, the transition marks a significant milestone in the evolution of grassroots financial intermediation, positioning the institutions to serve a broader customer base beyond their traditional rural focus.
Under the new framework, the banks will continue to operate under a community-owned structure but with an expanded mandate that allows them to provide services to both rural and urban populations.
Previously, rural banks were largely limited to serving farming, fishing and semi-rural communities.
The Bank of Ghana has directed all institutions within the subsector to complete statutory name changes, corporate rebranding and other regulatory requirements by December 31, 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 BoG stated.
The central bank noted that the reform coincides with the 50th anniversary of rural banking in Ghana, describing the occasion as an appropriate moment to transition the sector into a new era of financial service delivery.
Rural banking was introduced in 1976 through a partnership between the Government of Ghana and the Bank of Ghana to improve access to banking services and integrate underserved communities into the formal financial system.
Over the past five decades, the sector has become a critical component of Ghana’s banking industry and a key driver of financial inclusion.
The BoG disclosed that the subsector currently comprises 147 licensed institutions operating close to 1,000 branches nationwide and serving more than eight million customers.
The regulator attributed the sector’s growth and resilience to consistent policy support, a development-focused regulatory environment and the strong link between community ownership and customer participation.
According to the central bank, the reforms will enable Community Banks to operate as modern deposit-taking institutions capable of serving diverse populations while creating opportunities for growth, innovation and 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 said.
The Bank expressed confidence that the transition will strengthen Ghana’s financial inclusion agenda and equip the sector to respond effectively to the country’s evolving economic and development needs.


































