Bhutan's banking sector is regulated by the Royal Monetary Authority, with five licensed commercial banks operating under prudential frameworks updated in 2024.
Bhutan's financial sector is small by regional standards but has undergone substantial regulatory modernisation since the 1990s, evolving from a rudimentary state-directed system into a structured framework guided by international best practice. The Royal Monetary Authority (RMA) — Bhutan's central bank — oversees five licensed commercial banks and a growing set of digital payment providers through a suite of prudential regulations, monetary policy tools, and consumer protection standards. As the economy diversifies and digital transactions surge, the RMA's regulatory agenda has expanded considerably beyond its original mandate.
The Royal Monetary Authority
The RMA was established under the RMA Act of 1982 and is headquartered in Thimphu. It serves as the sole issuing authority for the Bhutanese Ngultrum, manages foreign exchange reserves, and administers Bhutan's monetary policy with a primary objective of maintaining price and financial stability. The RMA Act of 2010 replaced the original legislation entirely, broadening the authority's mandate to include macroprudential oversight, payment system regulation, and consumer financial protection.
The Financial Institutions Act of 1992 gave the RMA formal powers to license, regulate, and inspect all financial institutions operating within Bhutan. This statutory framework has been supplemented over the years by a growing body of subsidiary legislation: prudential regulations, payment system guidelines, anti-money-laundering directives, and fintech sandbox rules. The most recent comprehensive update was the Prudential Regulations 2024, which consolidated and strengthened requirements around capital adequacy, liquidity, corporate governance, and risk management.
Commercial Banks
Five institutions hold commercial banking licences in Bhutan:
- Bank of Bhutan (BoB): The oldest and largest bank, established in 1968 as a joint venture with the Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China. BoB remains majority state-owned and operates the widest branch network across all 20 dzongkhags.
- Bhutan National Bank (BNB): Incorporated in 1997 as the second major commercial bank, with government retaining a majority stake. BNB has expanded retail banking services significantly since 2010.
- Druk PNB Bank: A joint venture between Bhutanese shareholders and Punjab National Bank of India, bringing Indian banking expertise and cross-border transaction capability.
- T Bank: The newest private commercial bank, catering primarily to retail and SME customers in urban centres.
- Bhutan Development Bank (BDB): Converted from the Bhutan Development Finance Corporation in 2010, the BDB focuses on rural lending, agricultural credit, and micro-enterprise financing — sectors under-served by commercial banks.
All five banks must maintain a minimum Capital Adequacy Ratio (CAR) of 10 per cent and a Core Capital (Tier 1) ratio of not less than 5 per cent under the Prudential Regulations 2024. These thresholds broadly align with Basel II principles, adapted for Bhutan's scale and risk profile.
Digital Payments and Fintech
Digital financial services have grown rapidly under RMA stewardship. In 2024, total digital payment transaction value reached Nu 9.97 billion — a growth of more than 207 per cent from the previous year — reflecting accelerating adoption of mobile wallets, point-of-sale terminals, and internet banking. By end-2024, Bhutan counted some 23,315 registered merchants accepting digital payments, a number that has expanded dramatically since the RMA launched its national digital payment interoperability framework.
The RMA has developed guidelines for interoperable payment systems and onboarded fintech applicants into a Regulatory Sandbox that allows supervised experimentation with innovative financial products before full licensing. This approach mirrors sandbox programmes pioneered in Singapore and the United Kingdom, adapted to Bhutan's supervisory capacity. The emergence of Bhutan's royal-backed MindfulnessX digital economy initiative has further elevated fintech's profile in national planning.
Challenges and Outlook
Despite progress, Bhutan's banking sector faces structural constraints. Financial inclusion in remote dzongkhags remains limited; physical branch infrastructure is expensive to maintain in mountainous terrain, and many rural households rely on cash. Correspondent banking relationships with international institutions are limited by Bhutan's small size and the Indian Rupee peg, which constrains independent monetary manoeuvre. Non-performing loans in agriculture and micro-enterprise portfolios periodically test the sector's resilience.
The RMA's medium-term agenda centres on expanding digital access to financial services, strengthening anti-money-laundering compliance in line with FATF standards, and developing a credit bureau that would improve lending decisions across all five banks. Bhutan's participation in the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) finance ministers' process adds a regional dimension to domestic regulatory evolution.
See also
- Banking Sector in Bhutan
- Cryptocurrency policy and regulation in Bhutan
- Social Media Regulation in Bhutan
- Media Regulation in Bhutan
References
See also
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