Data Residency in Bangladesh: What the Rules Mean for Cloud

Before moving regulated workloads to the cloud, Bangladeshi banks, government bodies, and enterprises ask the same question: where does our data live, and is that allowed? This guide explains data residency and sovereignty in the Bangladesh context — the policy direction, the practical options, and how TiCON Cloud designs and documents compliant architectures.

Cloud-first
BD government direction
In-region
Asia Pacific options
Documented
Compliance controls
SOC 2 / ISO
Security posture

Data residency vs. data sovereignty

These terms are often used interchangeably, but they are different. Data residency is about where your data is physically stored. Data sovereignty is about which country's laws govern that data. For regulated workloads in Bangladesh, both matter — and the right architecture addresses each explicitly.

What Bangladesh's rules say

Bangladesh follows a cloud-first direction set by the ICT Division, and sector regulators add their own requirements. Banks operate within Bangladesh Bank guidelines, and the Data Protection Act shapes how personal data is handled. The practical effect: some data can use the nearest cloud region, while specific categories may require in-country or tightly controlled residency.

  • ICT Division cloud-first policy direction
  • Bangladesh Bank guidelines for financial workloads
  • The Data Protection Act for personal data
  • Sector-specific rules for telecom, health, and government

Your residency options

There is rarely a single answer — the right design blends options by data category.

In-region cloud

Run on the nearest AWS region (Asia Pacific) for low latency, with controls that document data location.

  • Low latency to Dhaka
  • Encryption in transit & at rest
  • Audit-ready logging

Local data center

Keep sensitive data in-country via a local data center or custom CDN, integrated with the cloud.

  • In-country residency
  • Hybrid architecture
  • Content sovereignty

Controlled hybrid

Split workloads by sensitivity — cloud for scale, local for regulated data.

  • Data classification
  • Policy enforcement
  • Documented boundaries

How TiCON keeps you compliant

We classify your data, map each category to a compliant location and control set, and document everything for your auditors and regulators. As an AWS Advanced Tier Partner, we build to SOC 2, ISO 27001, and PCI-DSS readiness — with encryption, IAM, key management, and continuous monitoring — and we bill it all in BDT.

Frequently asked questions

Does data have to stay inside Bangladesh for cloud?

It depends on the data category and your regulator. Bangladesh follows a cloud-first direction, and much data can run in the nearest AWS region with documented controls. Specific categories — particularly some financial and personal data — may require in-country or tightly controlled residency. TiCON classifies your data and designs a compliant, documented architecture.

What is the difference between data residency and data sovereignty?

Data residency is where your data is physically stored. Data sovereignty is which country's laws govern it. Compliant cloud design in Bangladesh addresses both — location controls plus legal/jurisdiction considerations.

Is cloud allowed for banks in Bangladesh?

Yes. Banks operate cloud workloads within Bangladesh Bank guidelines. TiCON builds PCI-DSS-ready, data-resident architectures and documents the controls for your compliance team.

How does TiCON document compliance?

We provide a data classification, an architecture that maps each category to a compliant location and control set, and audit-ready documentation aligned to SOC 2, ISO 27001, and PCI-DSS readiness plus Bangladesh's ICT Division and Data Protection Act guidance.