The Bank of Ghana has directed all existing Rural Banks to convert into Community Banks by 31 March 2026 as part of a comprehensive overhaul of the country’s microfinance sector aimed at strengthening financial stability, improving governance, and accelerating financial inclusion.
The directive forms part of new Guidelines on the Revised Microfinance Sector Framework, issued under the Banks and Specialized Deposit-Taking Institutions Act, 2016 and the Non-Bank Financial Institutions Act, 2008.
The reform replaces the previous Tier 1–4 structure with four categories: Microfinance Banks, Community Banks, Credit Unions, and Last-Mile Providers. ARB Apex Bank Limited has been restructured to serve as a central services hub for the sector.
Under the new framework, Community Banks will operate as licensed deposit-taking institutions focused on integrating both rural and urban communities into the national financial ecosystem.
Following the mandatory conversion deadline of 31 March 2026, former Rural Banks must meet revised minimum capital and regulatory requirements by 31 December 2026. The new minimum capital has been set at GH¢5 million for Community Banks and GH¢10 million for new urban Community Banks.
Community Banks must also adopt broader community ownership structures, with at least 30 percent of shares held by individuals and groups within their communities. Maximum shareholding thresholds have been introduced to promote inclusive participation, with limits on individuals, related parties, registered groups, and corporate bodies. Institutions exceeding these thresholds are expected to regularize by the end of 2026.
Banks falling below the new capital requirement must notify the Bank of Ghana by 30 June 2026 of their chosen capitalization pathway, followed by progress updates by 30 September 2026.
Options include standalone recapitalization, mergers or acquisitions, or supervised transfer of assets and liabilities to stronger institutions to ensure depositor protection. Institutions that fail to comply face regulatory action, including possible restrictions on operations.
Microfinance Banks will serve micro, small, and medium enterprises, groups, and individuals. Existing savings and loans companies, finance houses, deposit-taking microfinance companies, and micro-credit companies may transition into Microfinance Banks, subject to a minimum capital of GH¢50 million for existing institutions and GH¢100 million for new entrants by 31 December 2026.
Transition plans must be communicated to the Bank of Ghana by 30 June 2026, with progress reports due by 30 September 2026.
Credit Unions with total assets of at least GH¢60 million maintained over a year will come under direct Bank of Ghana licensing and supervision starting in the second quarter of 2026. Smaller cooperatives and informal operators, such as susu collectors and rotating savings groups, will be classified as Last-Mile Providers under delegated supervision.
ARB Apex Bank will provide shared services across Microfinance Banks, Community Banks, and licensed Credit Unions, including reserve management, emergency liquidity support, cheque clearing, specie movement, fund management, payment guarantees, and common digital infrastructure. The bank will also coordinate inspections, training, policy implementation, and temporary support for distressed institutions.
The Bank of Ghana said the reforms address long-standing weaknesses in capitalization, governance, and operational efficiency while modernizing the sector through technology, stronger risk management, and better integration into the national financial system.
The overhaul also aims to promote inclusive ownership and improve the transmission of monetary and financial inclusion policies.
All existing institutions are required to complete their transition into the new framework by 31 December 2026. Mergers, acquisitions, and asset transfers will require prior regulatory approval, with customers notified at least 30 days before major changes.
The central bank has temporarily restricted licensing of new institutions, except for Community Banks in priority areas, to ensure an orderly rollout. The Guidelines take immediate effect, with the Bank of Ghana reserving the right to amend or supplement the framework as needed.
Source: www.kumasimail.com































































