Burkina Faso has put digital access at the heart of its development plan. The country’s PACTDIGITAL program sets out to expand broadband, improve public services online, and build digital skills for people who still struggle to take part in the digital economy. That direction also fits Burkina Faso’s wider push for nationwide connectivity, digital identity, local data hosting, and stronger online government services. This is a funded national program with a clear structure.
PACTDIGITAL starts with access
The program focuses on a basic problem that still shapes daily life in Burkina Faso. Too many people live far from reliable internet, digital public services, and training that can help them find work or run a business more efficiently. The World Bank says PACTDIGITAL will target rural communities and internally displaced people, while also helping sectors such as education, health, and social protection move more services online.
The ministry has framed the project in simple terms. It wants to improve the availability, access, and everyday use of digital services across the country. That matters because digital policy only works when people can actually connect, understand the tools, and use them to solve real problems, such as getting health information, handling documents, or reaching government services without costly travel.
The rollout already shows real work
Burkina Faso has moved beyond the approval stage and into delivery. A World Bank implementation report says procurement for rural broadband reached its final stage, with operators set to begin deployment once contracts are signed. The same report says the project has already supported the rollout of digital government tools, including the e-Patient platform and an administrative legal proceedings platform for the justice system, which went live in December 2025. The project team has also put a grievance mechanism and annual citizen consultations in place.
The broader ministry scorecard also points to visible movement on the ground. According to Ecofin Agency, Burkina Faso connected 370 localities to telephone services in 2025, developed or deployed 272 online public services, and already had 146 of them in operation. The government also signed an agreement with La Poste to build 20 citizen houses that help vulnerable groups access digital services. These details matter because they show the project in everyday terms, not just in funding documents.
Digital services can cut daily friction for people and firms
The strongest case for PACTDIGITAL sits in its practical value. Better broadband gives schools, clinics, courts, and local businesses faster access to tools they already need. Online services reduce repeat trips to public offices, shorten waiting times, and make records easier to manage. Skills training also matters because digital platforms do not help much if people cannot use them with confidence. The World Bank has said this project is meant to create economic opportunities, improve broadband access, support innovation, and attract investment into the digital economy as well as education and health.
Burkina Faso has also linked this effort to data sovereignty and stronger local infrastructure, which reflects a wider shift in African tech policy. The government’s 2030 digital roadmap includes plans to end telecom white zones, roll out digital identity, expand cashless public payments, and keep more sensitive data inside the country. In January 2026, the government inaugurated two mini data centres with about 3,000 TB of combined storage and capacity for more than 7,000 virtual machines to support public sector workloads. That gives the country more room to host platforms locally and build technical capacity at home.
What to watch in 2026
The next phase now depends on scale and speed. Ecofin Agency reports that Burkina Faso and the World Bank have aligned around four priorities for 2026, which include network expansion, data hosting centres, access points for digital public services, and a stronger fibre network. The ministry also plans to push unique electronic identification enrollment and aims to register seven million people by the end of the year, while extending coverage to hundreds of additional underserved localities.
PACTDIGITAL gives Burkina Faso a serious chance to turn digital policy into useful infrastructure and working public tools. The country has already moved past broad promises and into implementation. The next test is simple. More people need real access, more services need to work reliably, and the benefits need to reach villages, small firms, young workers, and families that still sit outside the digital economy. If that delivery holds, PACTDIGITAL will stand as one of the country’s most practical growth programs in years.











