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Online Media in Bhutan

Last updated: 29 June 2026694 words

Since the internet arrived in Bhutan in 1999, online media has transformed the country's information landscape. Around 90% of Bhutanese are now active on at least one social media platform, yet the country's press freedom ranking has fallen sharply amid concerns about asymmetric enforcement and self-censorship.

Bhutan's media landscape was transformed with the introduction of the internet and television in 1999—a deliberate decision by the Royal Government timed to coincide with the country's silver jubilee celebrations. In the quarter century since, digital media has moved from novelty to necessity: social media platforms, news websites, and messaging applications now constitute the primary information environment for the majority of Bhutanese, particularly urban youth. Approximately 90 percent of the country's population are active on at least one social media platform, spending an average of 163 minutes daily, and 88.4 percent of young people access news primarily through smartphones. This rapid shift has outpaced the regulatory frameworks designed for print and broadcast media, creating tensions between the country's stated commitment to media freedom and the practical realities of an uneven information ecosystem.

Online News and Digital Journalism

Bhutan's principal media organisations have all established online presences. Kuensel—the country's oldest and most widely read newspaper, which was the sole newspaper in Bhutan until the mid-2000s—operates Kuensel Online, which reaches readers throughout the country and in the Bhutanese diaspora. The Bhutan Broadcasting Service (BBS) maintains an online portal and active social media accounts; research has found BBS and Kuensel to be the most active Bhutanese media organisations on social media platforms. Private newspapers including The Bhutanese, Business Bhutan, and Bhutan Today publish digital editions alongside their print versions.

The financial model of Bhutanese online journalism is fragile. Private newspapers derive an estimated 90 percent of their income from government advertising, creating structural incentives for soft coverage of official positions. Kuensel, which is 49 percent privately owned, faces pressure from both commercial and state directions. The emergence of free online content has reduced the willingness of readers to pay for journalism, compressing revenues further and contributing to high attrition among trained journalists who seek better-paid opportunities elsewhere or emigrate.

Social Media and Citizen Journalism

Facebook is by far the dominant social media platform in Bhutan, used for news sharing, political commentary, business promotion, and community organising. It serves as a de facto public sphere in which conversations that newspapers handle cautiously circulate more freely—though algorithmic prioritisation of emotionally engaging content has contributed to polarisation and the spread of unverified information. During the 2024 dengue outbreak, for example, WhatsApp groups disseminated unverified prevention tips while BBS television coverage experienced delays awaiting official clearance, eroding public trust in institutional media.

TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube have rapidly growing Bhutanese user bases, with content creators producing entertainment, travel, cultural commentary, and political satire. These platforms operate outside the licensing and editorial standards frameworks that apply to registered media organisations under the Information, Communications and Media Act (ICMA) 2018, administered by the Bhutan Information Communications and Media Authority (BICMA). Critics have pointed out that the ICMA creates asymmetric enforcement: registered print and broadcast outlets face stringent standards and can be penalised for the same content that circulates freely on unregulated digital platforms.

Press Freedom and Regulatory Challenges

Bhutan's press freedom trajectory has been a matter of significant concern. Reporters Without Borders ranked Bhutan 33rd globally in 2022; by 2024 the country had fallen to 147th—a collapse reflecting institutional barriers, self-censorship, and the absence of a right-to-information law. An estimated 84 percent of Bhutanese journalists report being unable to report freely due to pressure from powerful individuals or institutions, and two-thirds say that government authorities regularly deny or delay information requests without legal basis. Bhutan has no equivalent of India's Right to Information Act or Bangladesh's equivalent legislation—a gap that the Journalists' Association of Bhutan and press freedom advocates have repeatedly called on Parliament to address. The National Council's Social and Cultural Affairs Committee has recommended formalising BBS as a genuinely independent public service broadcaster, a reform that would require institutional and legislative changes to implement.

See also

References

  1. "Freedom in Chains: Why Bhutan's media laws are holding back journalism in the digital era." Journalists' Association of Bhutan.
  2. "Bhutan." Reporters Without Borders.
  3. "Mass media in Bhutan." Wikipedia.
  4. "When Freedom of Expression Isn't Free: Journalism, Facebook, and Censorship in Bhutan." The Diplomat, August 2018.

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