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When was Centenary Bank awarded as the most admired Ugandan bank?
On 19 August 2025, in a moment marked by both solemn pride and vibrant celebration, Centenary Bank was officially crowned Most Admired Ugandan Bank and recognized as the Ugandan Bank Doing Good in the Community—two prestigious accolades at the Brand Africa Awards 2025. The ceremony, part of the trusted Brand Africa Awards platform (established in 2011 and run by independent research powerhouses GeoPoll and Kantar), honors brands across more than 30 African countries based on their perceived trust, relevance, and community impact.



At the event, the State Minister for ICT, Godfrey Kabbyanga, personally handed the awards to Emmanuel Otuko, Centenary Bank Manager of Sustainability—a symbolic passing of trust and responsibility. In his acceptance remarks, Managing Director Fabian Kasi delivered heartfelt gratitude on behalf of the institution, stating:
“We are humbled and deeply honoured to be named the Most Admired Ugandan Bank and recognized as the Ugandan Bank Doing Good in the Community. These awards belong not just to us, but to every customer, partner, and community we serve. Thank you for walking this journey with us. We remain committed to building on this trust by delivering quality financial services and creating long-lasting impact in our communities.”
Managing Director Fabian Kasi, Centenary Bank
It was not just an awards moment—it was an affirmation of four decades of people-centred banking, inclusive innovation, and tangible community transformation.
Why Centenary Bank Keeps Getting Crowned
In August 2025, Centenary Bank was crowned Uganda’s “Most Admired Bank” and also recognized as the “Ugandan Bank Doing Good in the Community” at the Brand Africa 100: Africa’s Best Brands (Uganda) edition—an accolade that spotlights banks that command deep consumer trust and goodwill. Local coverage praised Centenary’s customer-centric innovation, agent-led outreach, and community impact as key reasons for the win.
This isn’t a one-off. In June 2024, the bank had already been named “Most Admired Financial Services Brand in Uganda” by Brand Africa, reinforcing a pattern of admiration and sustained performance.
Those reputation awards sit alongside performance-based honors. In 2024, Global Finance named Centenary Bank “Best Bank in Uganda” in its World’s Best Banks Awards, and the bank also took the AFAWA Bank of the Year at the African Banker Awards for advancing women-led SMEs.
So—why Centenary Bank? Below is what makes the bank stand out.
1) A Clear Mission, Massive Reach
Centenary calls itself Uganda’s leading commercial microfinance bank, serving ~3 million customers with UGX 6.3–7.1 trillion in assets, and distributing services through 81+ branches, over 200 ATMs, and 7,400+ CenteAgents—a footprint built intentionally for inclusion beyond major towns. That physical network is fused with CenteMobile, CenteOnline, CenteVisa and Mastercard debit solutions, so customers can bank anywhere. That reach translates into usage. Industry reporting for 2024 shows Centenary posting a record net profit (~UGX 342.3 bn) and channeling a significant share of transactions through agents—evidence that the bank’s rural and peri-urban strategy is working.
2) Digital That Meets People Where They Are
Centenary’s digital stack is designed for everyday Ugandans:
- CenteMobile app & USSD (*211#): account access, transfers, bill pay, and Cente Mobile Loans via app or USSD. The bank has also pushed self-onboarding (“CenteOnTheGo”) to open accounts digitally with an ID scan and selfie.
- WhatsApp banking: a low-friction channel that leverages where customers already are.
- The digital focus sits alongside continuous security-education campaigns—another reason consumers trust the brand.
3) Products That Reflect Uganda’s Realities
Centenary’s inclusion DNA shows up in products tailored to specific communities:
- Students & youth: the Cente Volution Account (18–26 years) has low opening and minimum balances, no monthly maintenance fee, a free ATM card, and access to student loans—making formal banking affordable for campus life.
- Women entrepreneurs: Cente Supawoman is a savings product and platform for women in business, paired with credit and capacity-building through the wider “Supawoman” program.
- Refugees: the Cente Refugee Individual Savings Account opens at zero shillings, earns interest, has no maintenance fee, and includes access to financial literacy—explicitly lowering barriers for displaced people.
- Groups & grassroots finance: VSLA and SACCO accounts, investment-club and NGO accounts reflect how many Ugandans actually save and borrow—in groups.
- Agriculture & green energy: a deep menu of agri loans (production, crop marketing, youth agri loans) plus CenteGreen and solar/energy loans supports the real economy and the energy transition.
4) Centenary Bank Promotions and Offers That Drive Everyday Value
Centenary regularly runs campaigns to spur usage and cushion household cash-flows:
- Kwaata Sente: a short-tenor micro-loan for Airtel Money users (7–30 days; typical cap UGX 500,000), with transparent FAQs and opt-in via USSD—useful for micro-cash-flow gaps.
- Cente Shop Fest and seasonal promotions: shopping and festive-season campaigns, prize draws and merchant offers that reward active customers and drive digital payments.
These promotions are not just flashy; they nudge customers toward formal, digital transaction habits, which is part of why the brand keeps scoring on “admiration.”
5) SMEs, Agriculture and Capital for Growth
Two areas loom large in Centenary’s strategy:
- SMEs (including women-led): the AFAWA win recognizes lending and advisory tailored for women entrepreneurs—a segment often underserved by collateral and documentation barriers.
- Agriculture: Centenary has consistently built agri products and partnered on concessional schemes (e.g., Uganda’s Agricultural Credit Facility and Small Business Recovery Fund)—and was recognized by Bank of Uganda for timely performance on these lines in 2025.
External financing partnerships—for example with the European Investment Bank to on-lend to agri-SMEs—have helped extend impact deeper into the countryside.
6) Centenary Bank Community Impact (the “Doing Good” That Wins Hearts)
Brand admiration grows when customers see a bank invest back into society. Centenary’s CSR and sustainability record includes:
- Environmental stewardship: multi-year tree-planting with the National Forestry Authority (NFA) and partners—part of a wider climate and restoration agenda.
- Health & sport: long-running support for the Cancer Run and grassroots sports like the Masaza Cup, rallying mass participation and channeling fundraising for public causes.
Consistency here—not just occasional programs—turns “marketing” into trust.
7) Independent Validation Beyond Popularity Contests
Even if you set the “Most Admired” banners aside, Centenary’s performance metrics hold up:
- Best Bank in Uganda (Global Finance, 2024)—a technical, data-driven recognition.
- Profitability & scale: a top-two position by profit in 2024 and a top-two position by assets in the country.
- Regional standing: among Africa’s Top 100 banks by tier-1 capital (2024), underscoring institutional strength.
Bottom Line
Centenary Bank keeps getting crowned because its brand promise (inclusion and transformation) is backed by execution: an unmatched last-mile network, high-usage digital channels, targeted products for students, women, refugees and groups, serious commitments to SMEs and agriculture, and credible community investments. That combination—relevance + reach + results—turns customers into admirers and juries into repeat voters.
Recent Centenary Bank Recognition at a Glance
- Most Admired Bank (Uganda) & Bank Doing Good — Brand Africa Awards 2025 (August 19, 2025)
- Most Admired Financial Services Brand (Uganda) — Brand Africa 100, June 2024
- Best Bank in Uganda — Global Finance, 2024
- AFAWA Bank of the Year — African Banker Awards, 2024

