The Bank of Ghana has announced the official conversion of the nation’s Rural Banking sector into the Community Banking Sector, marking a significant structural pivot in the country’s microfinance landscape.
Under the new directive, which aligns with the Revised Microfinance Sector Framework of 2026, all existing rural banks are legally required to undergo corporate rebranding and complete statutory name changes by the end of December 2026.
This sweeping transition arrives exactly fifty years after the inception of rural banking in Ghana, which was originally launched in 1976 to bridge the financial gap between rural communities and the national banking architecture.
Over the last five decades, the subsector has expanded into a massive financial network comprising 147 licensed institutions and roughly 1,000 branches serving over eight million customers nationwide.
According to an official statement issued by the central bank’s Communications Department, the reform is designed to modernize local financial structures and expand banking access beyond traditional rural enclaves.
“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 central bank stated.
Officials emphasize that the transformation will usher in a sophisticated era of community-level financial intermediation, leveraging decades of shared community ownership and regulatory support to secure the subsector’s long-term growth.

By: Rainbowradioonline.com/Ghana
















