- Jamaica’s deposit-taking institutions (DTIs) have shown steady and sustained recovery following Hurricane Melissa, which made landfall on October 28, 2025, according to a release from the Bank of Jamaica (BOJ) on January 7, 2026.
- As of December 30, 2025, 150 of 164 DTI branches across the island were operational, representing a 91.5% national recovery rate, up from 75.6% immediately post-Melissa. This improvement reflects coordinated restoration efforts among financial institutions, regulators, and utility providers.
- In the immediate aftermath of Melissa, several parishes experienced significant operational disruptions, with branch recovery falling as low as 25% in Trelawny, 33.3% in Westmoreland and Hanover, and 40.0% in St. Elizabeth. However, recovery accelerated from mid-November onward, with the DTI recovery percentage surpassing 85% by November 18th and continuing to improve steadily through December.
- Several parishes, namely, Kingston, Manchester, Portland, St. Andrew, St. James, St. Mary, and Trelawny, achieved or maintained near-full (95–100%) branch recovery relatively early in the post-storm period. Kingston and St. Andrew, the country’s financial hub, having a total of 53 DTI branches, maintained 100% and 91.2% operational status, respectively, shortly after the storm and remained stable through year-end, reflecting minimal disruption to branch operations following Hurricane Melissa. Westmoreland and St. Elizabeth also recorded notable improvements, recovering from 33.3% and 40.0% post-Melissa to 77.8% and 80.0%, respectively, by the end of December.
- While most parishes showed strong recovery, St Thomas, Hanover and Clarendon continue to lag behind the average recovery, ending December at 66.7%, 66.7%, and 75.0% recovery, respectively. These slower rebounds likely reflect ongoing infrastructure challenges and extensive damage at some locations that will take longer times to rebuild, particularly in parts of western Jamaica.
- Overall, BOJ’s data release alludes to the resilience of Jamaica’s financial sector, which rebounded steadily after Hurricane Melissa, restoring critical banking operations, supporting economic stability, and ensuring continued public access to financial services across the majority of the island.
(Sources: BOJ & NCBCM Research)
