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Bangladesh Bank’s Digital Finance Roadmap_ Reforms By 2027

Bangladesh Bank’s Digital Finance Roadmap: Reforms By 2027

Bangladesh Bank’s Digital Finance Roadmap: Reforms By 2027

Meta Description Bangladesh Bank’s 2025–2027 digital finance reforms, cashless payments, IIPS, open banking, digital banks, & inclusion.
Banking
December 29, 2025
Ashfat Al Rashid
Ashfat Al Rashid

SQA Engineer specializing in backend testing, API automation (RestAssured, Postman), and test automation with Java. Proficient in UI automation (Selenium, POM) and performance testing (JMeter). Experienced in manual, regression, database, and UAT testing, ensuring software quality across various platforms.

Md. Asad Chowdhury Dipu
Bangladesh Bank’s Digital Finance Roadmap_ Reforms By 2027

Bangladesh Bank is currently at a historic crossroads, shifting from a traditional regulator to the architect of digitization in Bangladesh. The Financial Institutions Division (FID) and Bangladesh Bank published the draft and final regulations for the Bank Resolution Ordinance 2025 in October 2024–2025.  The 2025–2027 window represents a critical structural reset aimed at modernizing the nation’s financial DNA and preparing for LDC graduation.

Core Objectives by 2027:

  • Total Digitization: BB Aims to Achieve 75% cashless transactions through a unified, interoperable payment system (Bangla QR).
  • Financial Inclusion: Leveraging branchless Digital Banks to bring formal credit to the unbanked rural population.
  • Systemic Stability: Implementing the Bank Resolution Ordinance to empower swifter oversight and protect the banking sector from volatility.

The Vision: Fully Digital Transactions by July 2027

The central bank has set a hard deadline: July 2027 will mark the full operationalization of the Inclusive Instant Payment System (IIPS). *Source: The Daily Star*. This move is designed to unify the fragmented digital landscape into a single, seamless channel.

Policy Goals & Cash Reduction

Governor Ahsan H. Mansur recently emphasized that by 2027, all financial entities—banks, MFS, insurance, and microcredit firms—must be interoperable.
  • The 75% Target: The roadmap aims to transition 75% of all domestic retail transactions to digital, significantly reducing the “cost of cash” (printing, storage, and transport).
  • Eliminating “Cash-Out”: The IIPS, built on the open-source Mojaloop platform with support from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, aims to make digital money as fluid as cash, removing the need for expensive cash-out fees.
Source: mojaloop.io

Economic and Governance Benefits

Digitization acts as a catalyst for macroeconomic stability and transparency:
  • Revenue Boost: Digital trails simplify VAT and tax collection, potentially increasing the national tax-to-GDP ratio.
  • Governance: Shifting to G2P (Government-to-Person) payments through the IIPS eliminates leakages and ensures social safety net funds reach the correct beneficiaries instantly.
  • Traceability: A cashless system curtails the informal economy and curbs money laundering.

Ecosystem Readiness

The groundwork is already in place, though full adoption remains a hurdle:
  • MFS & Banks: While over 120 million MFS accounts exist, the central bank is now mandating that all providers—including giants like bKash—integrate fully with the national IIPS switch.
  • Universal Standard: The Bangla QR is being aggressively scaled to ensure that a single code works for any bank or wallet, lowering the barrier for millions of micro-merchants.
Source: The Daily Star

Interoperable Transaction Infrastructure

The cornerstone of the 2027 roadmap is a unified financial highway where money flows seamlessly between different providers. Bangladesh Bank plans to achieve this through the expansion of the Interoperable Digital Transaction Platform (IDTP).

The Unified Platform: IDTP/Binimoy

BB Plans to move beyond fragmented systems to a single Application Programming Interface (API) that connects every corner of the financial sector.
  • Banks & MFS: Users will no longer be trapped within a specific app. Users can transfer money from the bank to mobile wallets and vice versa easily.
  • Payment System Operators (PSOs): PSOs are being integrated to handle high-volume processing, ensuring the system remains stable even during peak transaction periods.
  • Digital Sovereignty: The new IIPS (Inclusive Instant Payment System) is being built on the open-source Mojaloop platform (supported by the gates foundation), to reduce dependence on expensive foreign channels and keep citizen data with national borders.

Impact on Payments & Acceptance

The IDTP creates a “multiplier effect” across the economy by simplifying how different sectors interact.Retail & Merchant Acceptance: Through Bangla QR, a small merchant only needs one QR code to accept payments from 50+ banks and all MFS providers. Eliminating the need for multiple expensive POS terminals.Government Payments (G2P): Social safety net payments and subsidies will be disbursed via the IDTP, ensuring funds reach the intended recipient’s wallet instantly, regardless of which service they use.Business & P2P: For individuals and SMEs, this removes the “walled garden” effect, lowering transaction fees and making digital money as convenient as physical cash.

Open Banking: The Data-Driven Innovation

A pivotal element of the 2027 roadmap is the shift toward Open Banking. This framework allows customers to securely share their financial data with authorized third parties transforming banks from closed vault into open and collaborative platforms.

Bangladesh Bank’s Strategic Approach

BB is moving towards an API-first regulatory framework. Rather operating in isolation, the central bank is mandating the use of standardized Application Programming Interfaces (APIs). Ensuring that all financial systems can “talk” to each other securely under strict regulatory oversight.
  • Consent-Based Sharing: At the heart of this system is consumer sovereignty. Data is only shared when a customer provides explicit, time-bound consent.
  • Security Standards: BB is introducing rigorous cybersecurity protocols and data protection guidelines (aligned with the Data Protection Act) to ensure that while data is “open,” it is never “exposed.

Enabling Innovation While Protecting Customers

The goal is to foster a “Sandbox” environment where innovation doesn’t compromise stability.
  • Regulatory Oversight: Only licensed fintechs and TPPs (Third-Party Providers) can access the Open Banking gateway.
  • Cyber Resilience: With the rise of data sharing, BB has prioritized AI-driven fraud detection & real-time monitoring to protect customer assets.
Expected Benefits: A Win-Win-Win SituationThe shift to Open Banking creates a ripple effect across the entire economic spectrum:
Stakeholder
Key Benefit
SMEs
Access to Alternative Credit Scoring. Banks can analyze an SME’s real-time cash flow from MFS or e-commerce platforms to provide collateral-free loans.
Fintech Startups
The ability to build Personal Finance Management (PFM) apps that aggregate data from multiple bank accounts, offering users a holistic view of their wealth.
Consumers
Greater choice and competition. Open banking allows for Account Aggregation, meaning you can manage your savings, loans, and payments across different banks from a single app.

The Digital Banking Framework and Inclusion Strategy

The 2027 roadmap transitions Bangladesh from “Agent Banking” to “Digital Banking”, focusing on a branchless, mobile-first approach to reach the last mile.

BB’s Digital Bank Establishment Guideline

Bangladesh bank has introduced a rigorous framework to ensure these new entities are both innovative and resilient.

  • The Rationale: Digital banks are designed to eliminate the high overhead of physical branches, allowing for lower transaction costs & specialized services for the “unbanked” population.
  • Capital & Governance: Paid-up capital in August 2024, BB raised the minimum capital requirement to BDT 3 Billion (up from BDT 1.25 Billion) to ensure only serious, stable players enter the market.
  • Technology First: These banks must operate without physical branches, ATMs, or plastic cards, relying entirely on app-based interfaces and Bangla QR.
  • Lending Focus: Unlike traditional banks,Digital banks are restricted from issuing Letters of Credit (LCs) or financing large industries, focusing on small-scale digital loans instead.

Source: Guidelines to Establish Digital Banks By The Central Bank.

Financial Inclusion: No-Frill Accounts & G2P

True inclusion is more than just technology, it’s about accessibility for the most vulnerable citizens.

  • No-Frill Accounts (NFAs): These are “low-barrier” accounts that require a minimum deposit (as low as BDT 10 for farmers). Serving as the entry point for rural workers, street vendors, and students into the formal economy.
  • Government-to-Person (G2P) Links: The roadmap aims to channel all social safety net payments and subsidies directly into these no-frill accounts. This “direct-to-wallet” model eliminates middlemen, reducing leakages and ensuring that government aid reaches the correct beneficiary instantly through the IIPS switch.
  • Digital Credit Scoring: By analyzing the transaction data of these accounts, banks can provide credit to those who lack traditional collateral, effectively turning a “no-frill” user into a credit-worthy entrepreneur.

Source: The Financial Express (No-Frill Accounts’ drive growth).

Source: 40pc of social assistance to be disbursed

Regulatory Sandbox and Innovation Governance

To prevent regulation from stifling progress, Bangladesh Bank (BB) has shifted toward a “Test and Learn” philosophy. The 2027 roadmap establishes a structured environment where innovation is nurtured without risking national financial stability.

The Regulatory Sandbox: A Safe Harbor for Fintech

The Fintech Regulatory Sandbox, managed by the Payment Systems Department, serves as a controlled “live” environment.

  • The Concept: It allows local fintech startups and financial institutions to test innovative products—such as blockchain-based remittances or peer-to-peer lending—on a limited scale with real customers.
  • Benefits for Startups: Participants receive “no-objection” certificates to experiment with solutions that may not yet fit into existing legal frameworks, significantly reducing the time and cost to enter the market.
  • Regulatory Clarity: Testing in the sandbox provides BB with the data needed to draft permanent, evidence-based regulations once a product is proven safe.

Source: AFI Global Report on DFS Supervision in Bangladesh.

AI Policy and the Future of Finance

Recognizing that Artificial Intelligence is no longer optional, the National AI Policy 2024 and BB’s sector-specific guidelines are setting the stage for an AI-driven financial landscape by 2027.

  • Alternative Credit Scoring: AI models are being sanctioned to analyze non-traditional data (mobile bill payments, utility history) to provide credit scores for “thin-file” rural borrowers.
  • Efficiency Gains: BB is encouraging the use of Robotic Process Automation (RPA) and AI chatbots to cut operational costs by an estimated 40-60%, making banking services cheaper for the end consumer.
  • Governance & Ethics: The policy mandates “explainability” in AI decisions to prevent algorithmic bias, ensuring that automated loan rejections or fraud flags are transparent and fair.

Source: The Business Standard (Bangladesh Bank set to introduce AI policy)

Supporting Local Innovation

The roadmap aims to position Bangladesh as a regional fintech hub:

  • Innovation Units: BB has established dedicated fintech offices to act as a one-stop virtual facilitation center for entrepreneurs.
  • Fintech Hubs: Collaborations with the ICT Division’s “Smart Bangladesh” initiatives are creating incubators and accelerators, providing local startups with the mentorship and funding necessary to compete with global players.

Payment System Reforms and New Regulations

To anchor the 2027 roadmap, Bangladesh Bank (BB) has introduced a robust legislative spine: the Payment and Settlement Systems Act 2024.  This act provides the legal authority for two critical draft regulations aimed at securing the digital frontier: the E-Money Issuer (EMI) Regulation 2025 and the Payment System Operator (PSO) Regulation 2025.

E-Money Issuers (EMI)

Bangladesh is moving toward a globally recognized model that separates payment services from traditional banking. This allows non-bank fintech companies to issue digital value.

  • Dedicated E-Money Issuers (DEMIs): Under the draft 2025 rules, non-bank entities can now apply to become “Dedicated EMIs.” These institutions must meet a minimum paid-up capital of BDT 500 million (50 Crore).
  • Float Management & Safeguarding: To protect the public, EMIs are strictly prohibited from using customer funds for their own business. Every Taka issued as e-money must be backed 1:1 by physical cash held in a Trust and Settlement Account (TSA) at a scheduled commercial bank.
  • Supervision: BB will perform real-time monitoring of these “floats” to ensure that even if an EMI faces financial trouble, the customers’ digital balances remain safe and redeemable.

Payment System Operators (PSO)

While EMIs hold the money PSOs (such as SSLCOMMERZ etc) are the “pipes” that move it. The Draft PSO Regulation 2025 tightens the oversight of these mediators.

  • Licensing & Accountability: PSOs must now navigate a two-stage licensing process (NOC followed by a full license). Minimum paid up capital requirements ranges from 10 million BDT for digital merchant acquirers to BDT 200 million for ATM/CRM operators.
  • Strict Penalty Framework: The draft introduces personal liability. If a PSO fails to maintain sufficient funds in its settlement account to pay merchants, directors and CEOs can be held personally liable and face fines of up to BDT 3 million (30 Lakh).
  • Operational Standards: The regulation mandates a “Central Monitoring System” for all PSOs. For physical infrastructure like ATMs, downtime is strictly capped (e.g., maximum 12 hours in urban areas) to ensure the “Cashless Bangladesh” vision is reliable 24/7.

Strengthening Trust

Standardizing KYC (Know your Customer) for merchants and mandating all transaction data to be preserved for 12 years, these reforms aim to eliminate fraud and money laundering. This regulatory system ensures that as Bangladeshis move their wealth into the digital realm, their trust is backed by the full power of the central Bank.

Credit Infrastructure Reform: From Assets to Behavior

One of the quietest but most profound shifts in the 2027 roadmap is the overhaul of how credit worthiness is measured. Bangladesh bank is moving away from a system that favors large collateral toward one that rewards repayment behavior.

Credit Bureaus: From CIB to Private Credit Bureaus (2025)

BB will perform real-time monitoring of these “floats” to ensure that even if an EMI faces financial trouble, the customer digital balances remain safe and redeemable. For decades, the Credit information Bureau (CIB) acted as the sole, centralized database for loan data, primarily focusing on high-value bank loans. However, it often left “thin file” individuals – like farmers or small traders invisible to lenders.

In FY 2025 BB issued licenses to five private credit bureaus (including firms like Creditinfobd and TransUnion). The goal is to integrate alternative data, such as utility bill payments, mobile recharge patterns and MFS transaction history into their scoring models.

These reforms create “Reputation Collateral”. By 2027, a micro-entrepreneur can use a consistent history of paying electricity bills and making bKash transaction to secure a formal bank loan, even if they do not own land or buildings.

Expanded Credit for Devices

A digital financial roadmap is useless if citizens cannot afford the “gateways” which are “smartphones”. To solve this Bangladesh Bank is encouraging Device Financing schemes.

The 2027 Target is by facilitating device credit, the bank aims to push smartphone penetration beyond current levels, ensuring that by 2027, the technology gap does not become a financial gap.

Financial Inclusion Channels Supported by Bangladesh Bank

While digital transformation is the goal, the roadmap for 2027 acknowledges that high-tech solutions must be paired with high touch delivery channels to reach every citizen. Bangladesh Bank (BB) is scaling four primary pillars to ensure inclusive growth.

Agent Banking Expansion

Agent banking has become the backbone of rural inclusion, providing formal banking services where physical branches are not viable.

  • BB will perform real-time monitoring of these “floats” to ensure that even if an EMI faces financial trouble, the customer’s digital balances remain safe and redeemable.
  • By 2027 the focus will shift from simple deposits to “full-serice” agency points. These agents will facilitate SME loan disbursements and insurance premium collection
  • All genet outlets will be equipped with Bangla QR capabilities, turning every rural agent into a digital payment hub for the community.

School Banking Initiatives

To foster a “savings culture” from a young age, BB has mandated aggressive school banking programs. The goal is to bring students into the formal system early ensures they are “digitally native” by the time they enter workforce.

National Financial Literacy Programs

Technology is only effective if people know how to use it safely. Bangladesh bank has launched the “Striving for Financially Literate Society” initiative.

Consumer Protection for Digital Users

Trust is the currency of a digital economy. The roadmap introduces several layers of protection:

  • Chargeback Mechanisms: BB is working on automated systems that allow MFS and card users to reverse fraudulent or disputed transactions.
  • Data Privacy: In alignment with the Personal Data Protection Ordinance 2025, the central bank is enforcing strict “data sovereignty” rules, ensuring that customer financial data is stored securely and used only with explicit consent.
  • AI Surveillance: Real-time, AI-driven monitoring systems are being deployed to detect and block suspicious transaction patterns before they can drain a user’s account.

Green Finance and Sustainable Banking Mandates

As one of the world’s most climate-vulnerable nations, Bangladesh is leveraging its 2027 roadmap to integrate environmental resilience into the hearth of its financial system. BB is moving from simple “green quotas” to a sophisticated, risk-based sustainable banking model.

Bangladesh Bank’s Green Finance Mandates

The central bank has transitioned from voluntary guidelines to mandatory requirements to ensure capital flows toward eco-friendly projects.

  • Aggressive Lending Targets: As of 2025, banks and financial companies are mandated to allocate 5% of their loan disbursement specifically to green finance and 20% to broader sustainable finance (including socially responsible projects)
  • The 40% Vision: By 2027m the central bank aims for 40% of all private-sector loans to support sustainable ventures, covering 12 core categories such as renewable energy, liquid waste management, and “Green CMSMEs”
  • Direct Green Refinance: To keep costs low for borrowers, BB operates a BDT 100 billion (10,000 Crore) refinance scheme, providing banks with low-cost liquidity for eco-friendly initiatives like solar power and ETPs (Effluent Treatment Plants).

Strengthened Regulation and Banking Sector Stability

To safeguard the 2027 digital vision, Bangladesh Bank is implementing a high-velocity stability agenda. This transition moves the regulator from being a reactive “Compliance Checker” to a proactive “risk manager”

Encouraging Digital Credit and Economic Growth

The final pillar of the 2027 roadmap aims to turn digital connectivity into economic momentum by enabling a “credit-on-demand” economy, encouraging BNPL financing for 4G/5G smartphones to build digital credit histories, expanding instant nano-loans and digitally focused CMSME financing through IIPS, and boosting startup growth via the Startup Finance Master Circular (July 2025), which offers a BDT 500 crore refinance fund, permits bank-led equity investments, and raises startup loan limits to BDT 2–8 crore by stage.

Consumer Trust, Protection, and Confidence

To address the trust deficit in a rapidly cashless economy, Bangladesh Bank is rolling out a Consumer Protection Framework (2025–2027) focused on safer and more transparent digital finance, strengthening data privacy under the Personal Data Protection Ordinance 2025, mandating consent-first data use, robust cybersecurity standards, and continuous audits of critical financial infrastructure, while also capping and standardizing digital fees, requiring clear Bangla disclosures for digital loans, ensuring fairness in AI-based credit scoring, and improving consumer confidence through centralized dispute resolution, a proposed digital financial ombudsman, and mandatory 24/7 customer support for digital banks.

Implementation Timeline: Bangladesh Bank’s 2025–2027 Roadmap

Bangladesh Bank’s roadmap to a “Smart Bangladesh” outlines a phased transition to a fully digital financial system by July 2027, beginning in 2025 with stronger laws, pilot digital banks, fintech regulation, and investor-friendly reforms, scaling in 2026 through private credit bureaus, nationwide payment interoperability, and global-standard alignment ahead of LDC graduation, and culminating in July 2027 with 75% cashless retail transactions, full rollout of the Inclusive Instant Payment System (IIPS), and complete adoption of IFRS-9–based credit risk management.

Conclusion

The Bangladesh Bank Roadmap 2027 is a blueprint for an economy that is faster, fairer, and more resilient. By replacing the “cost of cash” with the “efficiency of data”, the central bank is ensuring that every citizen from the city professional to the rural farmer has a seat at the table of progress. As we approach 2027, the focus will remain on one great goal, a Smart, Cashless and Sustainable Bangladesh.

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