The Bank of Ghana has officially announced a new phase in digital credit regulation. Starting November 3, 2025, the central bank will begin accepting applications from entities seeking to operate as Digital Credit Service Providers. This includes every mobile loan application, digital lender, or fintech company offering credit services through apps or online platforms.
Existing lenders currently operating without a license now have until June 30, 2026, to complete their registration and meet all documentation requirements. After that, the Bank has made it clear that any non-compliant entity could face enforcement action.
The directive, issued under Notice No. BG/GOV/SEC/2025/35, is a direct move toward structuring Ghana’s digital credit ecosystem and eliminating the long-standing problem of unregulated lending. The Bank of Ghana has steadily built momentum around fintech oversight, and this new licensing regime completes an important piece of that puzzle.
Why this update matters for lenders
Ghana’s lending market has seen remarkable growth over the past decade, driven by the expansion of mobile money and digital payments. According to Ghana’s chamber of telecommunications, as of February 2025, the total number of registered mobile money accounts stood at 74.1 million, up from 66.9 million during the same period in 2024. This penetration gave lenders unprecedented reach to underbanked and first-time borrowers.
However, the convenience and accessibility of digital loans also created space for unhealthy practices. Reports of hidden charges, aggressive debt recovery, and unauthorized data sharing became common across social media and consumer protection forums. In 2022, the Bank of Ghana issued warnings against unlicensed mobile loan apps operating illegally, many of which accessed borrowers’ phone contacts and used intimidation tactics for loan recovery.
The new licensing regime aims to curb these excesses by formalizing how lenders operate. It is not merely a bureaucratic step but a signal that the regulator wants digital credit to evolve responsibly.
For lenders, this is an opportunity to solidify their legitimacy. Those who operate within the new framework will be seen as trusted credit providers, able to attract more customers and partnerships. For those who ignore it, the risks are clear: regulatory sanctions, removal from app stores, and erosion of public trust.
The process will likely require detailed submissions covering ownership structure, corporate governance, operational models, data protection practices, and risk management systems. Lenders that use third-party loan management software will also need to show how those tools align with data privacy and consumer protection standards.
Recommended read: How to get lending license in Ghana
What’s changing in the lending environment
The Bank of Ghana’s directive is part of a broader effort to bring digital credit under the same regulatory umbrella as traditional financial institutions. Over the past few years, the central bank has strengthened supervision of fintechs through guidelines for payment service providers, e-money issuers, and remittance operators. The inclusion of digital lenders is the logical next step.
Going forward, licensed lenders will be required to:
- Submit periodic operational and financial reports to the Bank.
- Maintain transparent disclosure of fees and interest rates.
- Follow ethical loan recovery and data protection practices.
- Implement internal risk controls and consumer recourse mechanisms.
This move could lead to fewer “rogue” loan apps and more trust in the digital lending ecosystem. Customers will know that any platform offering credit has been vetted by the regulator. It also opens the possibility for interoperability with other regulated entities such as banks, mobile money operators, and credit bureaus, which can improve credit data quality across the system.
The change may seem rigorous, but it aligns Ghana with emerging global standards in fintech supervision. Markets that have gone through similar reforms often see a short-term contraction in the number of operators, followed by long-term stability and higher investor confidence.
What global fintech players should take note of
This move from the Bank of Ghana is not isolated. Across Africa, regulators have been revisiting how digital credit is governed.
In Kenya, for example, the Central Bank launched the Digital Credit Providers Regulations in 2022. By March 2024, only 51 out of over 400 digital lenders had received licenses, while many others were forced to suspend operations until they met the new requirements. These regulations came after widespread public complaints about privacy violations and unethical collection practices.
In Nigeria, the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC) introduced a mandatory Limited Interim Regulatory Framework and Guidelines for Digital Lending in 2022 and a 2025 new consumer lending regulation (DEON CL). As of 2024, only lenders listed on the FCCPC’s official register could legally offer digital credit services. Apps that failed to comply were delisted from Google Play and Apple’s App Store.
Tanzania has also moved in a similar direction. The Bank of Tanzania, through its Microfinance (Digital Credit) Regulations, 2021, requires all digital lenders to register and submit regular reports, including detailed information about ownership, interest charges, and complaint resolution processes.
Ghana’s move mirrors these efforts. For global or regional fintech companies expanding across Africa, the message is clear: unregulated lending is no longer an option. To operate sustainably, compliance has to be built into business models from day one.
This shift also presents a strong business opportunity. Compliance-ready software solutions, audit trails, automated KYC verification, and integrated reporting tools are becoming key differentiators for lenders. Technology providers that can help financial institutions meet these new expectations will find a growing market in Ghana and beyond.
How lenders can prepare
The June 2026 deadline may seem distant, but the preparation required is extensive. Lenders should start early to avoid last-minute compliance challenges.
Clarify your licensing category: Determine whether your operations qualify as a Digital Credit Service Provider under the new directive. Even fintechs offering credit indirectly such as buy-now-pay-later or merchant credit may fall within this scope.
Conduct a compliance audit: Review your lending process from origination to recovery. Assess data handling, credit scoring transparency, and customer support. Weak areas should be addressed now, not during the licensing application.
Get expert support: Consult legal and regulatory professionals who understand the Bank of Ghana’s fintech supervision structure. Proper guidance can help ensure your documentation meets expectations and reduces the risk of rejection.
Review your technology stack: The regulator will expect systems that safeguard customer data and enable accurate reporting. If you rely on third-party software for loan management, confirm that it supports encryption, KYC validation, and reporting features.
Prepare for reporting and audits: The Bank is likely to introduce ongoing compliance checks. Lenders should put in place systems that can easily generate financial statements, customer activity logs, and performance data upon request.
Recommended read: Who regulates lending in Ghana
What this means for the future of digital lending in Ghana
Digital lending has been one of Africa’s fastest-growing fintech segments. In Ghana, loan app downloads surged during the pandemic as individuals and small businesses sought quick access to cash. According to reports, Ghana’s fintech market was expected to be valued at US$18.6 billion, growing eight times from 2020, and digital lending forms a significant share of that figure.
The new licensing rule represents the maturing of that market. It’s a signal that regulators are no longer content with innovation existing outside the rulebook. Instead, they are creating frameworks that ensure innovation benefits both lenders and borrowers in a responsible, sustainable way.
For lenders, this could open the door to new possibilities such as cross-border partnerships, credit bureau integrations, and institutional funding, because licensed entities tend to attract more trust from investors and partners. For borrowers, it means safer digital borrowing experiences with fairer terms and more reliable service.
If implemented effectively, Ghana’s model could become a reference point for other African markets. It shows that digital credit can grow fast and still stay within a structured regulatory framework that encourages innovation rather than stifling it.
How Lendsqr can help
Licensing requirements like Ghana’s are a reminder that technology and compliance must evolve together. For lenders, this doesn’t have to be a burden. With the right infrastructure, it can actually make operations smoother and more transparent.
At Lendsqr, we’ve built lending technology that supports compliance from the ground up. Our platform helps lenders manage end-to-end credit operations from onboarding and credit decisioning to repayment tracking and reporting, with clear audit trails and data protection safeguards that meet regulatory expectations.
Whether you’re a new digital lender looking to apply for a Bank of Ghana license or an established fintech expanding across Africa, Lendsqr offers the tools to help you stay compliant, scale responsibly, and deliver fair credit to your customers.
You can book a demo or start your free trial at lendsqr.com.