Prime Minister of Bangladesh
| Prime Minister of the People's Republic of Bangladesh | |
|---|---|
| গণপ্রজাতন্ত্রী বাংলাদেশের প্রধানমন্ত্রী | |
Seal of the prime minister of Bangladesh | |
Standard of the prime minister of Bangladesh | |
since 17 February 2026 | |
| Style |
|
| Type | Head of government |
| Abbreviation | PM |
| Member of | |
| Reports to | |
| Residence | State Guest House Jamuna |
| Seat | Primary: Prime Minister's Office, Old Sangsad Bhaban, Tejgaon, Dhaka Secondary: Bangladesh Secretariat, Segunbagicha, Dhaka |
| Appointer | President of Bangladesh by convention, based on appointee's ability to command the confidence of the Jatiya Sangsad |
| Term length | At the pleasure of the president Jatiya Sangsad term is 5 years unless dissolved sooner No term limits |
| Constituting instrument | Constitution of Bangladesh |
| Inaugural holder | Tajuddin Ahmed |
| Formation | 17 April 1971 |
| Salary | ৳305000 (US$2,500) per month (incl. allowances) |
| Website | pmo |
| Bangladesh portal |
The Prime Minister of Bangladesh, officially the Prime Minister of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh , is the head of government of Bangladesh. The Prime Minister leads the cabinet and, together with the cabinet, is collectively responsible for their policies and decisions to the parliament, to their political party, and ultimately to the electorate. While the Prime Minister is the chief executive of the government, they are ceremonially appointed by the President of Bangladesh and exercise powers in accordance with the constitution and parliamentary conventions.
The position was taken over by the military during the years of 1975–78, 1982–86 and 1990–91 due to imposed martial law. In each of these periods, the national government leadership was controlled by the military with the executive authority of the president and the prime minister. During the period between 1996 and 2008, the chief adviser of the caretaker government exercised authority as per the constitution as chief executive for 90 days during the transition from one elected government to another. The chief adviser headed an advisory committee comprising ten advisers. With powers roughly equivalent to an elected prime minister, his executive power was constrained by certain constitutional limitations. The system was scrapped in 2011 by the 15th amendment of the constitution to allow any political government to conduct a general election in the future. However, on 17 December 2024, the 15th amendment was declared illegal by the Supreme Court of Bangladesh.
Sheikh Hasina was the longest-serving prime minister in the country's history until her resignation on 5 August 2024, which left the position vacant. Tarique Rahman assumed office on 17 February 2026, after his Bangladesh Nationalist Party won the 2026 general election.