Internet & Online Safety · Bhutan
Online safety & content laws in Bhutan (2026)
Bhutan shaded by its internet & online safety status
Bhutan regulates online content primarily through the ICMA 2018 and its subordinate Rules and Regulations on Content 2019, administered by BICMA. The regime covers unlawful online content, cybercrime-adjacent offences, and broadcasting/media, but Bhutan lacks a dedicated cybercrime law, a standalone data protection act, and any comprehensive online safety statute comparable to the EU DSA or UK OSA. The National Assembly called in 2024–2025 for stronger enforcement and possible ICMA amendments to address harmful digital content.
Key points
The Information, Communications and Media Act 2018 (replacing the 2006 Act) is the principal statute covering telecommunications, broadcasting, print and online media, e-commerce, online privacy, and cyber offences including unauthorised access, identity theft, and unlawful data disclosure. It does not constitute a comprehensive online-safety regime.
The Bhutan InfoComm and Media Authority (BICMA) is the unified regulator for ICT, broadcasting, print, and online content. Its five members are directly appointed by the government. BICMA enforces content rules, issues public warnings on harmful social-media trends, and operates a public complaints mechanism.
The Rules and Regulations on Content 2019 prohibit content offensive to public feeling, threatening public security, or abusive in nature (s. 2.2(c)). Defamation is a criminal offence and national-security law penalises attempts to create hostility between government and people, both of which apply to online expression. Pornography and selected offensive websites are blocked.
Bhutan has no standalone cybercrime statute and has not signed the Budapest Convention on Cybercrime. Cybercrime investigations rely on ICMA 2018 provisions and the Civil and Criminal Procedure Code. There is also no dedicated Data Protection Act as of May 2026.
Bhutan's National Assembly passed a resolution calling for zero-tolerance enforcement against online pornographic, violent, and harmful content, and recommended establishing an autonomous Content Monitoring and Enforcement Division under BICMA and potential ICMA amendments to strengthen BICMA's autonomy and enforcement powers.
Bhutan's RSF World Press Freedom Index ranking fell sharply from 33rd (2022) to 152nd (2025), with 84% of journalists practising self-censorship according to the Bhutan Media Foundation. No specific age-verification rules for online platforms have been enacted; the 2023 National Digital Identity Act provides a digital-ID infrastructure but not online-safety age-gating obligations.
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Last verified 5/24/2026 · Orientation, not legal advice - verify against the primary sources linked above. Explore the full world map →