UNITED STATES
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             Washington, D.C. 20549

                                  SCHEDULE 14A
PROXY STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 14(a) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

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[ ] Preliminary Proxy Statement
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    (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
[X] Definitive Proxy Statement
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                             OHIO VALLEY BANC CORP.
                ------------------------------------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)


    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)

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                             OHIO VALLEY BANC CORP.
                                  P.O. Box 240
                             Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                             Wednesday, May 9, 2007
                                    5:00 p.m.

                                                                Gallipolis, Ohio
                                                                  April 18, 2007

To the Shareholders of
Ohio Valley Banc Corp.

     Notice is hereby given that the Annual Meeting of Shareholders (the "Annual
Meeting") of Ohio Valley Banc Corp.  (the  "Company") will be held at the Morris
and Dorothy  Haskins Ariel  Theatre,  426 Second  Avenue,  Gallipolis,  Ohio, on
Wednesday, the 9th day of May, 2007, at 5:00 p.m., Eastern Daylight Saving Time,
for the following purposes:

         1.   To elect four Directors of the Company, each to serve for a three-
              year term; and

         2.   To transact such  other business as may  properly  come before the
              Annual Meeting or any adjournment(s) thereof.

     Only  holders  of common  shares of the  Company  of record at the close of
business on March 20,  2007 will be  entitled to vote at the Annual  Meeting and
any adjournment.

     You are cordially  invited to attend the Annual  Meeting.  The vote of each
shareholder is important,  whatever the number of common shares held. Whether or
not you plan to attend  the Annual  Meeting,  please  sign,  date and return the
enclosed proxy promptly in the enclosed postage-paid, return-addressed envelope.
Should  you attend the  Annual  Meeting,  you may revoke  your proxy and vote in
person if you are a registered  shareholder.  Attendance  at the Annual  Meeting
will not, in and of itself, constitute revocation of your proxy.

                                           BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

                                           /s/ Jeffrey E. Smith
                                           -------------------------------------
                                           Jeffrey E. Smith
                                           President and Chief Executive Officer

                             OHIO VALLEY BANC CORP.
                                  P.O. Box 240
                             Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

                                                                  April 18, 2007

                                 PROXY STATEMENT

     This proxy statement and the  accompanying  proxy are first being mailed on
or  about  April  18,  2007 to  shareholders  of Ohio  Valley  Banc  Corp.  (the
"Company") regarding the Annual Meeting of Shareholders to be held at the Morris
and Dorothy  Haskins Ariel  Theatre,  426 Second  Avenue,  Gallipolis,  Ohio, on
Wednesday,  May 9, 2007, at 5:00 p.m., Eastern Daylight Saving Time (the "Annual
Meeting").

     A proxy for use at the Annual Meeting  accompanies this proxy statement and
is  solicited  by the Board of  Directors  of the  Company.  You may ensure your
representation  by  completing,  signing,  dating  and  promptly  returning  the
enclosed proxy in the envelope  provided.  Without affecting any vote previously
taken,  you may revoke  your proxy at any time  before it is voted at the Annual
Meeting (1) by giving  written  notice of  revocation  to the  Secretary  of the
Company, at the address of the Company set forth on the cover page of this proxy
statement; (2) by executing a later-dated proxy which is received by the Company
prior to the  Annual  Meeting;  or (3) if you are the  registered  owner of your
common  shares,  by attending the Annual Meeting and giving notice of revocation
in person.  If your  common  shares are held in the name of your  broker/dealer,
financial  institution  or other  holder of record  and you wish to revoke  your
proxy in  person,  you must  bring  an  account  statement  or  letter  from the
broker/dealer,  financial  institution or other holder of record  indicating how
many  common  shares you were the  beneficial  owner of on March 20,  2007,  the
record date for voting.  Attendance  at the Annual  Meeting  will not, in and of
itself, constitute revocation of a proxy.

     If you hold your common  shares in "street  name" with a broker,  financial
institution or other holder of record, you may be eligible to appoint your proxy
electronically  via the  Internet  or  telephonically  and you may  incur  costs
associated with the electronic  access. If you hold your common shares in street
name, you should review the information provided to you by the holder of record.
This  information will describe the procedures to be followed in instructing the
holder of record how to vote the  street  name  common  shares and how to revoke
previously given instructions.

     Only shareholders of record at the close of business on March 20, 2007, are
entitled  to  receive  notice  of and to  vote  at the  Annual  Meeting  and any
adjournment.  As of March 20, 2007, 4,179,255 common shares were outstanding and
entitled to vote at the Annual  Meeting.  Each common share  entitles the holder
thereof to one vote on each matter  submitted to the  shareholders at the Annual
Meeting. A quorum for the Annual Meeting is a majority of the outstanding common
shares.

     The Company  will bear the costs of  preparing,  printing  and mailing this
proxy statement, the accompanying proxy and any other related materials, as well
as all other costs incurred in connection  with the  solicitation  of proxies on
behalf of the Company's  Board of Directors  other than the Internet  access and
telephone  usage  charges  a  shareholder  may  incur  if a proxy  is  appointed
electronically through a holder of record. Proxies will be solicited by mail and
may be further solicited, for no additional compensation, by officers, directors
or employees of the Company and its subsidiaries by further mailing,  telephone,
facsimile,  electronic mail or personal  contact.  The Company will also pay the
standard   charges  and  expenses  of  brokers,   voting   trustees,   financial
institutions  and other  custodians,  nominees and  fiduciaries,  who are record
holders  of  common  shares  not  beneficially  owned  by them,  for  forwarding
materials  to the  beneficial  owners of common  shares  entitled to vote at the
Annual Meeting.

     If you are a  participant  in the Ohio  Valley  Banc Corp.  Employee  Stock
Ownership  Plan (the  "ESOP")  and common  shares  have been  allocated  to your
account in the ESOP,  you will be entitled  to instruct  the trustee of the ESOP
how to vote those common  shares and you will  receive your voting  instructions
separately.  If no instructions are given by you to the trustee of the ESOP, the
trustee will vote the common  shares  allocated to your ESOP account in its sole
discretion.

     The  inspectors of election  appointed for the Annual Meeting will tabulate
the  results of  shareholder  voting.  Common  shares  represented  by  properly
executed  proxies  returned to the Company  prior to the Annual  Meeting will be
counted toward the  establishment of a quorum for the Annual Meeting even though
they are marked "WITHHOLD AUTHORITY TO VOTE FOR ALL NOMINEES",  or "VOTE FOR ALL
EXCEPT" or not at all.  Brokers who hold common shares in street name may, under
the applicable rules of the exchange and other self-regulatory  organizations of
which the brokers are members,  sign and submit  proxies for such common  shares
and may vote such  common  shares on routine  matters  such as the  election  of
Directors.  However,  brokers who hold common shares in street name may not vote
such  common  shares on  non-routine  matters,  including  proposals  to approve
equity-based compensation plans, without specific instructions from the customer
who owns the common  shares.  Proxies  that are signed and  submitted by brokers
that have not been
                                       2

voted on certain  matters as described in the previous  sentence are referred to
as broker non-votes. Broker non-votes count toward the establishment of a quorum
for the Annual Meeting.

     The Annual  Report of the Company for the fiscal  year ended  December  31,
2006,  including  financial  statements,  is being  delivered  with  this  proxy
statement.

              OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT

     The following table indicates,  as of March 20, 2007,  certain  information
concerning the only shareholder  known by the Company to be the beneficial owner
of more than five percent (5%) of the outstanding common shares of the Company.

                               No. of Common Shares and               Percent of
Name and Address            Nature of Beneficial Ownership             Class (1)
----------------            ------------------------------             ---------

Morris and Dorothy                    330,335 (2)                         7.90%
Haskins Foundation, Inc.
1767 Chestnut Street
Bowling Green, KY  42101

(1) The percent of class is based upon 4,179,255 common shares outstanding as of
    March 20, 2007.

(2) Based on information contained  in a Schedule 13G filing with the Securities
    and Exchange Commission (the "SEC"), dated  January 19, 2007. Carol H. Wedge
    and Paul D. Wedge, Jr. share  voting and  investment  power over the 330,335
    common shares owned by the Morris and Dorothy Haskins Foundation, Inc.


     The  following  table  furnishes   information   regarding  the  beneficial
ownership  of common  shares of the  Company,  as of March  20,  2007,  for each
current  Director,  each  nominee for election to the Board of  Directors,  each
executive  officer  named in the  Summary  Compensation  Table  and all  current
Directors and executive officers as a group.

                            No. of Common Shares
                                and Nature of
Name                        Beneficial Ownership (1)        Percent of Class (2)
----                        ------------------------        --------------------

Anna P. Barnitz                    1,394  (3)                       .03%
W. Lowell Call                    22,441  (4)                       .54%
Steven B. Chapman                  1,668  (5)                       .04%
Robert E. Daniel                     514  (6)                       .01%
Robert H. Eastman                 69,827  (7)                      1.67%
Katrinka V. Hart (8)              10,383  (9)                       .25%
Harold A. Howe                    15,314  (10)                      .37%
E. Richard Mahan (8)               7,508  (11)                      .18%
Larry E. Miller, II (8)            8,773  (12)                      .21%
Brent A. Saunders                  5,759  (13)                      .14%
Scott W. Shockey (8)               2,447  (14)                      .06%
Jeffrey E. Smith (8)              19,451  (15)                      .47%
Roger D. Williams                    613  (16)                      .01%
Lannes C. Williamson               4,599  (17)                      .11%
Thomas E. Wiseman                 15,615  (18)                      .37%

All Directors and executive      186,306  (19)                     4.46%
officers as a Group
(15 persons)

(1)  Unless otherwise  indicated, the  beneficial owner   has  sole  voting  and
     investment  power with respect to all of the common shares reflected in the
     table.  All fractional  common shares have been rounded down to the nearest
     whole common share.  The Company has never granted  options to purchase its
     common shares.  The mailing  address for each of the current  Directors and
     executive officers of the Company is P.O. Box 240, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
                                       3

(2)  The percent of  class is  based  on 4,179,255 common shares  outstanding on
     March 20, 2007.

(3)  Represents 1,334 common shares held jointly by Mrs. Barnitz and her spouse,
     as to which she shares voting and  investment  power;  and 60 common shares
     held by Mrs. Barnitz as custodian for her children.

(4)  Represents common shares held in a  living trust account  with Mr. Call and
     his spouse, as to which they share voting and investment power.

(5)  Includes 1,558 common shares held jointly by Mr. Chapman and his spouse, as
     to which he shares  voting and  investment  power.  The  number  shown also
     includes 110 common shares held by a broker for Mr.  Chapman's  spouse in a
     self-directed  individual  retirement  account,  as to  which  she has sole
     voting and investment power.

(6)  Includes 514 common shares held jointly by Mr. Daniel and his spouse, as to
     which he shares voting and investment power.

(7)  Includes 43,362 common shares held jointly by Mr. Eastman and his spouse,as
     to which he shares voting and investment power.

(8)  Executive officer of the Company named in the Summary Compensation Table.

(9)  Includes 6,672 common shares held for the account of Ms. Hart in the ESOP.

(10) Includes 8,131 common shares held jointly by Mr. Howe and his spouse, as to
     which he shares voting and investment power;  6,902 common shares held in a
     self-directed  individual  retirement  account at Ohio Valley  Bank,  as to
     which Ohio Valley Bank has voting power and Mr. Howe has investment  power;
     and 280 common shares held jointly by Mr. Howe and his children as to which
     he shares voting and investment power.

(11) Includes 3,740 common shares held jointly by Mr. Mahan and his spouse,as to
     which he shares voting and investment  power;  95 common shares held by Mr.
     Mahan as  custodian  for his niece;  and 3,673  common  shares held for the
     account of Mr. Mahan in the ESOP.

(12) Includes 3,627 common shares held  jointly by Mr. Miller and his spouse, as
     to which he shares  voting and  investment  power;  and 5,146 common shares
     held for the account of Mr. Miller in the ESOP.

(13) Includes 2,305 common shares held jointly by Mr. Saunders and his spouse,as
     to which he shares voting and investment  power;  669 common shares held by
     Mr.  Saunders as custodian for the benefit of his children;  and 213 common
     shares held by a broker in a self-directed  individual  retirement account,
     as to which the broker has voting  power and Mr.  Saunders  has  investment
     power.

(14) Includes  2,030 common shares  held for  the account  of Mr. Shockey in the
     ESOP.

(15) Includes 499 common shares held by Mr. Smith's spouse, as to which  she has
     sole voting and  investment  power;  279 common shares held by Mr.  Smith's
     spouse as custodian for the benefit of his daughter as to which Mr. Smith's
     spouse exercises sole voting and investment power; and 14,169 common shares
     held for the account of Mr. Smith in the ESOP.

(16) Represents common shares held by Mr. Williams' spouse, as to which she  has
     sole voting and investment power.

(17) Includes 22 common shares held by Mr. Williamson's spouse, as to  which she
     has sole voting and  investment  power;  and 4,067 common  shares held by a
     broker in a self-directed  individual  retirement  account, as to which the
     broker has voting power and Mr. Williamson has investment power.

(18) Includes 14,547 common shares held jointly by Mr. Wiseman and his spouse,as
     to which he shares  voting and  investment  power;  and 1,067 common shares
     held by Mr. Wiseman as custodian for the benefit of his children.

(19) See Notes (3) through (7) and (9) through (18) above.
                                       4

             SECTION 16(a) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE

     The  Company's  Directors and  executive  officers,  as well as any persons
holding more than 10% of the Company's  outstanding  common shares, are required
to report their initial ownership of common shares and any subsequent changes in
their ownership to the SEC.  Specific due dates have been established by the SEC
for such  filings,  and the  Company  is  required  to  disclose  in this  proxy
statement any failure to file by those dates. Based on its review of (1) Section
16(a) reports filed on behalf of these individuals for their transactions during
the Company's 2006 fiscal year and (2)  documentation  received from one or more
of these  individuals that no annual Form 5 reports were required to be filed by
them for the  Company's  2006 fiscal  year,  the Company  believes  that all SEC
filing  requirements were met, except that Brent A. Saunders,  a Director of the
Company,  did not  timely  file a Form 4  reporting  the  disposal  of 26 of the
Company's common shares in an investment club in October 2006.

                       PROXY ITEM 1: ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

     The Company's  Board of Directors  currently  consists of eleven  members -
four in the class whose terms expire at the Annual  Meeting,  three in the class
whose terms  expire in 2008 and four in the class  whose  terms  expire in 2009.
Section  2.02(C) of the  Company's  Regulations  provides that the Directors may
change the number of  Directors  and fill any vacancy  created by an increase in
the number of Directors (provided that the Directors may not increase the number
of  Directors to more than twelve or reduce the number of Directors to less than
five).

     The  Board  of  Directors  has  reviewed,  considered  and  discussed  each
Director's  relationships,  both direct and indirect, with the Company or any of
its  subsidiaries  and the  compensation  and other  payments each Director has,
either  directly or  indirectly,  received from or made to the Company or any of
its  subsidiaries  in order to  determine  whether  such  Director  qualifies as
independent  under Rule 4200(a)(15) of the Marketplace Rules of the Nasdaq Stock
Market ("Nasdaq"),  and has determined that the Board has at least a majority of
independent  Directors.  The Board of Directors has determined  that each of the
following  Directors  has no  financial  or personal  ties,  either  directly or
indirectly,  with the Company or its subsidiaries  (other than compensation as a
Director of the  Company  and its  subsidiaries,  banking  relationships  in the
ordinary course of business with the Bank, ownership of securities issued by the
Company,  and  ownership  of common  shares of the Company as  described in this
proxy  statement)  and thus  qualifies as an  independent  Director under Nasdaq
Marketplace  Rule  4200(a)(15):  Anna P.  Barnitz,  W.  Lowell  Call,  Steven B.
Chapman,  Robert E. Daniel,  Robert H.  Eastman,  Roger D.  Williams,  Lannes C.
Williamson and Thomas E. Wiseman.

     The Board of Directors  proposes that each of the four nominees  identified
below be re-elected for a new three-year  term.  Each nominee was recommended to
the Board of Directors by the  Nominating  and Corporate  Governance  Committee.
Each person  elected as a Director at the Annual  Meeting will hold office for a
term of three years and until his  successor  is duly  elected and  qualified or
until his earlier  resignation,  removal from office or death. The four nominees
for  election  as  Directors  receiving  the  greatest  number of votes  will be
elected.  Common shares  represented by properly  executed and returned  proxies
will be voted  FOR the  election  of the  Board of  Directors'  nominees  unless
authority  to vote for one or more  nominees is  withheld.  Common  shares as to
which the authority to vote is withheld will be counted for quorum purposes, but
will not be counted  toward the  election of Directors or toward the election of
the individual nominees specified on the proxy.

     The  following  table  gives  certain  information,  as of March 20,  2007,
concerning  each  nominee  for  election as a Director  of the  Company.  Unless
otherwise  indicated,  each individual has had the same principal occupation for
more than five years.
                                       5



                NOMINEES FOR ELECTION FOR TERMS EXPIRING IN 2010

                                                    Position(s) Held with the Company
                                                    and its Principal Subsidiaries and         Director of the     Director of the
Name                                  Age                 Principal Occupation(s)                  Bank Since        Company Since
----                                  ---            ----------------------------------         ---------------     ---------------
                                                                                                        
Steven B. Chapman                     60             Certified Public Accountant, Chapman &            1999               2001
                                                     Burris CPA's LLC (Partner)

Robert E. Daniel                      66             Administrator, Holzer Clinic                      2005               2006
                                                     (multispecialty physician group practice)

Robert H. Eastman                     66             President of Ohio Valley Supermarkets, Inc.       1986               1992
                                                     (retail grocery stores)

Jeffrey E. Smith                      57             President and Chief Executive Officer             1987               1992
                                                     of the Company and the Bank

The Board of Directors recommends that shareholders vote FOR the election of the
above nominees.

     While it is contemplated that all nominees will stand for election,  if one
or more  nominees at the time of the Annual  Meeting  should be  unavailable  or
unable to serve as a  candidate  for  election as a  Director,  the  individuals
designated  as proxy holders  reserve full  discretion to vote the common shares
represented by the proxies they hold for the election of the remaining  nominees
and for the election of any  substitute  nominee or nominees  designated  by the
Board of  Directors.  The Board of  Directors  knows of no reason why any of the
nominees  named above will be  unavailable  or unable to serve if elected to the
Board.

     The  following  table  gives  certain  information  concerning  the current
Directors who will continue to serve after the Annual Meeting.  Unless otherwise
indicated,  each individual has had the same principal  occupation for more than
five years.


                      DIRECTORS WITH TERMS EXPIRING IN 2008

                                                    Position(s) Held with the Company
                                                    and its Principal Subsidiaries and         Director of the     Director of the
Name                                 Age                 Principal Occupation(s)                  Bank Since        Company Since
----                                 ---            ----------------------------------         ---------------     ---------------
                                                                                                        
W. Lowell Call                       70             Retired; Vice President of Bob Evans Farms,       1987               1992
                                                    Inc. (restaurant operator and food
                                                    products) from 1955 until 2001

Harold A. Howe                       56             Self-employed (real estate investments and        1998               2005
                                                    rentals); and President, Ohio Valley Financial
                                                    Services Agency, LLC

Brent A. Saunders                    49             Attorney at Law,                                  2001               2003
                                                    Halliday, Sheets & Saunders (Partner)

                                       6



                      DIRECTORS WITH TERMS EXPIRING IN 2009

                                                    Position(s) Held with the Company
                                                    and its Principal Subsidiaries and         Director of the     Director of the
Name                                 Age                 Principal Occupation(s)                  Bank Since        Company Since
----                                 ---            ----------------------------------         ---------------     ---------------
                                                                                                       
Anna P. Barnitz                      44             Treasurer and Chief Financial Officer, Bob's      2001               2003
                                                    Market and Greenhouses, Inc.
                                                    (horticultural products for wholesale
                                                    distribution and retail landscaping stores)

Roger D. Williams                    56             President, Bob Evans Restaurants, a division of   2005               2006
                                                    Bob Evans Farms, Inc. (restaurant operator and
                                                    food products) since August 2006. Executive
                                                    Vice President of Food Products Division, Bob
                                                    Evans Farms, Inc. from 1995 until August 2006

Lannes C. Williamson                 62             President, L. Williamson Pallets, Inc.            1997               2000
                                                    (sawmill; pallet manufacturing; and wood
                                                    processing)

Thomas E. Wiseman                    48             President, The Wiseman Agency, Inc. (insurance    1992               1992
                                                    and financial services)

     There are no family relationships among any of the directors,  nominees for
election as directors and executive officers of the Company.

Meetings of and Communications with the Board of Directors

     The Board of Directors  held a total of twelve (12)  meetings  during 2006.
Each  incumbent  Director  attended  75% or more of the  aggregate  of the total
number of  meetings  held by the  Board of  Directors  and the  total  number of
meetings held by all  committees of the Board of Directors on which the Director
served,  in each case  during  the  Director's  period of  service  in 2006 . In
accordance with applicable Nasdaq Marketplace  Rules, the independent  directors
meet in executive session as appropriate matters for their consideration arise.

     The Company  encourages  all incumbent  Directors and Director  nominees to
attend each annual meeting of shareholders.  All of the incumbent  Directors and
Director  nominees  attended the Company's last annual  meeting of  shareholders
held on May 10, 2006.

     The Company has an informal  process by which  shareholders may communicate
directly with Directors.  Any communication to the Board may be mailed to Thomas
E.  Wiseman,  Lead  Director,  in care of Investor  Relations  at the  Company's
headquarters,  P.O. Box 240, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631. The mailing envelope should
contain  a  clear   notation   indicating   that  the   enclosed   letter  is  a
"Shareholder-Board Communication" or "Shareholder-Director Communication." There
is no screening process,  and all shareholder  communications  that are received
for the Board's  attention  will be  forwarded to all  Directors.  The Board may
consider  the  development  of more  specific  communication  procedures  in the
future,  including procedures whereby shareholders may communicate directly with
specific Directors.

Committees of the Board

     The Board of Directors has four standing  committees:  the Audit Committee,
the Compensation and Management  Succession  Committee,  the Executive Committee
and the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee.

Audit Committee

     The Audit Committee is comprised of Anna P. Barnitz, W. Lowell Call, Steven
B. Chapman  (Chairman)  and Lannes C.  Williamson.  The Board of  Directors  has
determined  that each member of the Audit  Committee  qualifies  as  independent
under Nasdaq  Marketplace Rules 4200(a)(15) and 4350(d)(2) as well as under Rule
10A-3 promulgated under the Exchange Act.

     The Board of Directors believes that each member of the Audit Committee has
substantial  financial  experience  and is highly  qualified to  discharge  such
member's duties. Additionally, the Board of Directors has determined that Steven
B. Chapman qualifies
                                       7

     as an "audit committee financial expert" for purposes of Item 401(h) of SEC
Regulation  S-K based on his  training  and  experience  as a  Certified  Public
Accountant. The Board of Directors has determined that Mr. Chapman is capable of
(i) understanding  accounting principles generally accepted in the United States
("US GAAP") and financial statements,  (ii) assessing the general application of
US GAAP in connection with the accounting for estimates,  accruals and reserves,
(iii) analyzing and evaluating the Company's  consolidated financial statements,
(iv)  understanding   internal  control  over  financial   reporting,   and  (v)
understanding audit committee functions.

     The Audit  Committee is organized  and conducts its business  pursuant to a
written charter adopted by the Board of Directors. A current copy of the charter
of the Audit Committee is posted on the Company's website at www.ovbc.com  under
"About Us" in the Ohio Valley Banc Corp. section.  At least annually,  the Audit
Committee  reviews and  reassesses  the  adequacy of its charter and  recommends
changes to the full Board as necessary. The Audit Committee is responsible for:

o  overseeing the accounting and financial reporting process of  the Company and
   audits of the Company's financial statements;

o  monitoring the Company's  financial  reporting  process and  internal control
   system;

o  overseeing the certification process and other laws and regulations impacting
   the  Company's   quarterly  and  annual  financial   statements  and  related
   disclosure controls;

o  reviewing  and  evaluating  the audit efforts  of the  Company's  independent
   registered  public  accounting  firm  and  the  Company's  internal  auditing
   department;

o  providing an open  avenue of  communication  among the Company's  independent
   registered public accounting firm, financial and senior management,  internal
   auditing department and the Board of Directors;

o  appointing,  compensating and  overseeing the  independent registered  public
   accounting  firm  employed by the Company  for the  purpose of  preparing  or
   issuing an audit report or performing related work; and

o  establishing procedures for the receipt,retention and treatment of complaints
   received by the Company regarding accounting, internal accounting controls or
   auditing matters.

     In addition,  the Audit Committee  reviews and  pre-approves  all audit and
permitted  non-audit services provided by the Company's  independent  registered
public accounting firm and ensures that the registered public accounting firm is
not engaged to perform the specific non-audit  services  prohibited by law, rule
or   regulation.   The  Audit   Committee   will  also   carry  out  such  other
responsibilities as may be delegated to the Audit Committee by the full Board.

     The Audit  Committee held eleven  meetings during the 2006 fiscal year. The
Report of the Audit Committee for the 2006 fiscal year begins on page 8.

Compensation and Management Succession Committee

     The  Compensation  and Management  Succession  Committee is comprised of W.
Lowell Call,  Robert H. Eastman and Thomas E. Wiseman  (Chairman).  The Board of
Directors has  determined  that each member of the  Compensation  and Management
Succession  Committee  qualifies as independent  under Nasdaq  Marketplace  Rule
4200(a)(15). In addition, the Board of Directors has determined that each member
of the Compensation and Management Succession Committee qualifies as an "outside
director" for purposes of Section  162(m) of the Internal  Revenue Code of 1986,
as amended,  and as a  "non-employee  director" for purposes of Rule 16b-3 under
the Exchange Act.

     The  Compensation  and  Management  Succession  Committee is organized  and
conducts  its  business  pursuant to a written  charter  adopted by the Board of
Directors.  A current  copy of the charter of the  Compensation  and  Management
Succession  Committee is posted on the Company's  website at www.ovbc.com  under
"About  Us"  in the  Ohio  Valley  Banc  Corp.  section.  The  Compensation  and
Management Succession Committee periodically reviews and reassesses the adequacy
of its charter and recommends changes to the full Board as necessary.

     The purpose of the Compensation and Management  Succession  Committee is to
discharge  the   responsibilities   of  the  Board  of  Directors   relating  to
compensation of the Company's Directors and executive officers and to prepare an
annual report on executive compensation for inclusion in the proxy statement for
the Company's  annual meeting of  shareholders.  The Compensation and Management
Succession  Committee will also carry out such other  responsibilities as may be
delegated to it by the full Board.
                                       8

     The  Compensation  and Management  Succession  Committee is responsible for
reviewing and approving goals and objectives relevant to the compensation of the
Company's executive officers (including the Chief Executive Officer), evaluating
such executive officers'  performance in light of those goals and objectives and
determining  compensation  based  on  that  evaluation.   The  Compensation  and
Management  Succession Committee is also responsible for reviewing the Company's
incentive  compensation  programs and retirement plans, and recommending changes
to such  programs  and  plans  to the  Board  of  Directors  as  necessary.  The
Compensation and Management  Succession  Committee also reviews any severance or
other termination  arrangements to be entered into with the Company's  executive
officers.

     The  Compensation  and  Management  Succession  Committee held six meetings
during the 2006  fiscal  year.  The Report of the  Compensation  and  Management
Succession Committee on executive  compensation relating to the 2006 fiscal year
begins on page 15.

Executive Committee

     The  Executive  Committee  is  comprised  of Steven B.  Chapman,  Robert H.
Eastman,  Harold A. Howe,  Brent A.  Saunders,  Jeffrey E. Smith  (Chairman) and
Thomas E. Wiseman. The Executive Committee is authorized to act in the intervals
between meetings of the Directors on matters delegated by the full Board.  There
were six meetings of the Executive Committee during the 2006 fiscal year.

Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee

     The Nominating  and Corporate  Governance  Committee  consists of Steven B.
Chapman,  Robert H.  Eastman  (Chairman)  and  Thomas E.  Wiseman.  The Board of
Directors  has  determined  that each  member of the  Nominating  and  Corporate
Governance  Committee  qualifies as independent  under Nasdaq  Marketplace  Rule
4200(a)(15).  The purposes of the Nominating and Corporate  Governance Committee
are to:

o  identify qualified candidates for election, nomination  or appointment to the
   Board and  recommend to the full Board a slate of Director  nominees for each
   annual meeting of the shareholders of the Company;

o  make recommendations to  the  full  Board regarding  the Directors  who shall
   serve on committees of the Board; and

o  undertake such other responsibilities  as  may  be referred to the Nominating
   and Corporate Governance Committee by the full Board.

     The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee is organized and conducts
its business pursuant to a written charter adopted by the Board of Directors.  A
current copy of the charter of the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee
is posted on the Company's website at www.ovbc.com  under "About Us" in the Ohio
Valley Banc Corp.  section.  The Nominating and Corporate  Governance  Committee
periodically  reviews and  reassesses the adequacy of its charter and recommends
changes to the full Board as necessary.  The Nominating and Corporate Governance
Committee held two meetings during the 2006 fiscal year.

Nominating Procedures

     As described  above,  the Company has a standing  Nominating  and Corporate
Governance  Committee  that has the  responsibility  to identify  and  recommend
individuals  qualified  to  become  Directors.   The  Nominating  and  Corporate
Governance  Committee  recommended the nominees for election as Directors at the
Annual  Meeting.  When  considering  potential  candidates  for the  Board,  the
Nominating  and  Corporate  Governance  Committee  strives  to  assure  that the
composition of the Board, as well as its practices and operation,  contribute to
value   creation  and  to  the   effective   representation   of  the  Company's
shareholders.  The  Nominating and Corporate  Governance  Committee may consider
those factors it deems appropriate in evaluating Director  candidates  including
experience, reputation and geographic location. Depending upon the current needs
of the  Board,  certain  factors  may be  weighed  more or less  heavily  by the
Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee. From time to time, the Nominating
and Corporate  Governance  Committee may deem it prudent to recruit  individuals
with  education  and  expertise in a specific  discipline,  such as  accounting,
finance or law.

     In  considering  candidates  for the Board,  the  Nominating  and Corporate
Governance Committee evaluates the entirety of each candidate's  credentials and
does  not  have  any  specific  minimum  qualifications  that  must  be met by a
Nominating and Corporate Governance  Committee-recommended nominee. However, the
Nominating and Corporate  Governance  Committee does believe that all members of
the Board should have the highest  character  and  integrity;  a reputation  for
working constructively with others;  sufficient time to devote to Board matters;
and no conflict of interest that would interfere with performance as a Director.
Additionally,  the Company is a  highly-regulated  institution  and all Director
candidates  are  subject to the  requirements  of  applicable  federal and state
banking laws and regulations.
                                       9

     The Nominating and Corporate  Governance Committee considers candidates for
the  Board  from  any  reasonable   source,   including   recommendations   from
shareholders  and existing  Directors.  The Nominating and Corporate  Governance
Committee  does not evaluate  candidates  differently  based on who has made the
recommendation.  The  Nominating  and  Corporate  Governance  Committee  has the
authority to hire and pay a fee to  consultants or search firms to assist in the
process of identifying and evaluating candidates.  No such consultants or search
firms  have  been  used to date  and,  accordingly,  no fees  have  been paid to
consultants or search firms.

     Shareholders  may recommend  Director  candidates for  consideration by the
Nominating and Corporate  Governance  Committee by writing to Robert H. Eastman,
the  Chairman of the  Nominating  and  Corporate  Governance  Committee,  at the
Company's  executive  offices,  P.O.  Box  240,  Gallipolis,   Ohio  45631.  The
recommendation   should  give  the  candidate's  name,  age,  business  address,
residence  address,  principal  occupation  or  employment  and number of common
shares  beneficially   owned.  The  recommendation   should  also  describe  the
qualifications,  attributes,  skills  or  other  qualities  of  the  recommended
Director  candidate.  A written  statement  from the candidate  consenting to be
named as a Director  candidate  and, if  nominated  and  elected,  to serve as a
Director should accompany any such recommendation.

     Shareholders  who wish to nominate an individual for election as a Director
at an annual  meeting of the  shareholders  of the Company  must comply with the
Company's Code of Regulations  regarding  shareholder  nominations.  Shareholder
nominations  must be made in  writing  and  delivered  or  mailed  to  Robert H.
Eastman, the Chairman of the Nominating and Corporate Governance  Committee,  at
the Company's executive offices, P.O. Box 240, Gallipolis,  Ohio 45631, not less
than 14 days nor more than 50 days prior to any meeting of  shareholders  called
for the  election of  Directors.  However,  if less than 21 days'  notice of the
meeting is given to the shareholders, the nomination must be mailed or delivered
to the Chairman of the Nominating and Corporate  Governance  Committee not later
than the close of business on the  seventh  day  following  the day on which the
notice of the  meeting  was mailed to the  shareholders.  Each  nomination  must
contain  the  following  information  to the  extent  known  by  the  nominating
shareholder:  (a) the  name  and  address  of  each  proposed  nominee;  (b) the
principal  occupation of each proposed  nominee;  (c) the total number of common
shares of the Company that will be voted for each proposed nominee; (d) the name
and residence  address of the nominating  shareholder;  (e) the number of common
shares of the Company beneficially owned by the nominating shareholder;  and (f)
any other  information  required to be  disclosed  with respect to a nominee for
election as a Director under the proxy rules promulgated under the Exchange Act.
Nominations not made in accordance  with the Company's Code of Regulations  will
not be considered.


                COMPENSATION OF EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS

The following are the executive officers of the Company:

                                           Position(s) Held with the Company
Name                     Age                 and its Principal Subsidiaries                       Business Experience
----                     ---               ---------------------------------                      -------------------
                                                                                             
Jeffrey E. Smith          57    President and Chief Executive Officer of the Company and the      Commercial banker for 34
                                Bank since 2000. Chairman of the Executive Committee of the       years
                                Company and the Bank since 2000.

Scott W. Shockey          37    Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of the Company; and    Commercial banker for 14
                                Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of the Bank     years
                                since December 2004.

E. Richard Mahan          61    Senior Vice President and Secretary of the Company; and           Commercial banker for 33
                                Executive Vice President and Secretary of the Bank since 2000.    years

Larry E. Miller, II       42    Senior Vice President and Treasurer of the Company; and           Commercial banker for 20
                                Executive Vice President and Treasurer of the Bank since 2000.    years

Katrinka V. Hart          48    Senior Vice President and Risk Management Officer of the          Commercial banker for 27
                                Company since 2004; Executive Vice President and Risk             years
                                Management Officer of the Bank
                                since 2003.


                                       10

                      Compensation Discussion and Analysis

Overview of Compensation Program

     The  Compensation  and Management  Succession  Committee is comprised of W.
Lowell Call,  Robert H. Eastman and Thomas E. Wiseman  (Chairman).  The Board of
Directors has  determined  that each member of the  Compensation  and Management
Succession  Committee  qualifies as independent  under Nasdaq  Marketplace  Rule
4200(a)(15). In addition, the Board of Directors has determined that each member
of the Compensation and Management Succession Committee qualifies as an "outside
director" for purposes of Section  162(m) of the Internal  Revenue Code of 1986,
as amended,  and as a  "non-employee  director" for purposes of Rule 16b-3 under
the Exchange Act.

     The  Compensation  and  Management  Succession  Committee is organized  and
conducts  its  business  pursuant to a written  charter  adopted by the Board of
Directors.  A current  copy of the charter of the  Compensation  and  Management
Succession  Committee is posted on the Company's  website at www.ovbc.com  under
"About  Us"  in the  Ohio  Valley  Banc  Corp.  section.  The  Compensation  and
Management Succession Committee periodically reviews and reassesses the adequacy
of its charter and recommends changes to the full Board as necessary.

     The purpose of the Compensation and Management  Succession  Committee is to
discharge  the  responsibilities  of the  Board  of  Directors  relating  to the
compensation of the Company's Directors and executive officers and to prepare an
annual report on executive compensation for inclusion in the proxy statement for
the Company's  annual meeting of  shareholders.  The Compensation and Management
Succession  Committee will also carry out such other  responsibilities as may be
delegated to it by the full Board.

     The  Compensation  and Management  Succession  Committee is responsible for
reviewing and approving goals and objectives relevant to the compensation of the
Company's   executive  officers   (including  the  named  executive   officers),
evaluating  such  executive  officers'  performance  in light of those goals and
objectives  and  determining   compensation   based  on  that  evaluation.   The
Compensation  and  Management  Succession  Committee  is  also  responsible  for
reviewing the Company's  incentive  compensation  programs and retirement plans,
and recommending changes to such programs and plans to the Board of Directors as
necessary. The Compensation and Management Succession Committee also reviews any
severance  or  other  termination  arrangements  to be  entered  into  with  the
Company's executive officers.

Management's Role in Compensation Decisions

     While the Committee makes all  compensation  decisions  regarding the named
executive  officers,  the Committee utilizes data and reports as required by the
wage and salary  administration  plan described  elsewhere in this  Compensation
Discussion  and  Analysis.  Some  of this  data  is  prepared  or  assembled  by
management  and  includes,  but is not limited to, peer  analysis of  comparable
financial  industry  job  grades,   cost  of  living   adjustments,   and  total
compensation  benchmarking  primarily  for Ohio and the  Midwest  Region  of the
United States. The Committee regularly conducts executive sessions,  without the
presence of  management,  in  fulfilling  its  responsibilities  pursuant to its
charter.

Compensation Philosophy and Objectives

     The  executive  officers of the Company  receive no  compensation  from the
Company.  Instead,  they are paid by the Bank  for  services  rendered  in their
capacity as executive officers of the Bank. The compensation program is designed
to recognize and reward  individual  contribution  toward the  accomplishment of
specific, measurable organizational goals.

     The  objectives  of the  compensation  programs of the Company and the Bank
are:

o  compensation  of  the Company's executive officers and non-executive officers
   should be directly linked to corporate operating performance;

o  in  the  aggregate,  executive  officers  and non-executive  officers  should
   receive  fair and  equitable  compensation  for  their  respective  levels of
   responsibility  and supervisory  authority compared to their peers within the
   Company as well as their peers within the financial services industry.

     The Company has no policy for allocating  between  long-term and short-term
compensation or allocating between cash and non-cash components.
                                       11

Executive Compensation Components

     The   components   of  the   compensation   program  are:  a  base  salary,
performance-based   incentive  compensation,   retirement  plans  and  insurance
benefits.  Other than the  employee  stock  ownership  plan,  the Company has no
equity-based compensation plans.

     In 1993, the Company adopted a comprehensive wage and salary administration
plan  for the  Company  and the  Bank to be used  for all  employees,  including
executive officers.  That plan consists of a job grading process for all jobs in
the Company, a performance  appraisal process, and a periodic total compensation
benchmarking process to determine compensation market ranges for all job grades.
The components of this plan apply to both executive  officers and  non-executive
officers.  In 2001, a revised  compensation  market range was developed by Crowe
Chizek and Company LLC ("Crowe  Chizek") for all  positions  within the Company,
including those of the named executive  officers.  These ranges were reviewed in
2006 using data from the Crowe Chizek Ohio Financial  Institutions  Compensation
Survey,  which reported on 3 subsets: 11 Ohio financial  institutions with total
assets greater than $500 million, 44 financial  institutions in all asset sizes,
and 41 financial  institutions in market  populations of less than 100,000.  The
Crowe  Chizek  Midwest  Regional  Financial  Institutions  Survey also  provided
compensation  data on 3  subsets:  28  financial  institutions  in the states of
Illinois,  Indiana, Michigan, and Ohio with total assets from $500 million to $1
billion;  190  financial  institutions  in those states in all asset sizes;  and
financial  institutions  in those  states  in  market  populations  of less than
100,000.

     The Compensation and Management  Succession  Committee seeks to utilize the
four  components  of the  Company's  compensation  program in  concert  with the
comprehensive  wage and salary  administration  plan,  including the  individual
annual performance appraisal and the periodic benchmarking of all job grades, to
ensure that  employees who are  performing  "as expected" will be compensated in
the middle  one-third  of the  respective  market  range for similar jobs in the
financial  industry.  The possible  performance  standards and their  respective
point values of the plan are: well below  expectations  (1), below  expectations
(2), as expected (3),  exceeds  expectations  (4), and far exceeds  expectations
(5).

Base Salary

     The objective of the base salary component of the cash compensation plan is
to maintain a consistently applied and comprehensively administered system which
evaluates and compensates both executive and non-executive officers. This system
seeks to recognize and reward individual  performance.  In addition,  the system
periodically  benchmarks jobs in the banking and financial  services industry to
insure the Company's officers are compensated competitively by job grade and pay
range as compared to other financial  services  companies similar in size to the
Company.

     The Compensation and Management Succession Committee,  as referenced above,
annually  conducts a performance  appraisal to evaluate the ability of Mr. Smith
and the other named executive officers in achieving the expected requirements of
their  jobs  based  on the  following  10  specific  criteria  (the  "Evaluation
Criteria"): 1) job knowledge-information,  2) priority setting, 3) delegation of
duties, 4) decisiveness,  5) creativity,  6) written and oral communication,  7)
initiative and adaptability, 8) teamwork and open-mindedness, 9) work efficiency
and  follow-through,  and 10) goal  setting.  The  evaluation  conducted  by the
Compensation  and  Management   Succession   Committee  assessed  the  executive
officers'  performance in each of the 10 criteria on a range from 1, the lowest,
to 5, the highest, in increments of .25. The higher an officers'  performance on
the 10  criteria,  the  higher  the  officer  will be paid  within the pay range
established  through the benchmarking  process.  The Compensation and Management
Succession  Committee desires to have total compensation for each officer in the
range rather than just the base salary.  These performance ratings and positions
in the marketplace  range generated base salaries for 2006 and 2007 as described
below.

     In late 2005, the Company  benchmarked  the pay range  established for each
position using the services of Crowe Chizek.  Survey data from Crowe Chizek, ERI
Salary  Assessor and Watson Wyatt were used in  conjunction  with data  gathered
from employers in the Company's  immediate market area. Range midpoints from the
surveys were averaged to determine a common midpoint for each range. The company
adjusted its existing range midpoints to within +/- 10% of the benchmark project
output  thereby  creating  a new  range  for  2006.  The pay  range for each job
consists of three levels:  a lower  one-third,  a middle  one-third and an upper
one-third.  Each officer's  base salary  increase was then  determined  based on
their annual  performance  appraisal  and the position of their  expected  total
compensation  within  the  marketplace  range.  As  referenced  earlier  in this
discussion,  the Compensation and Management  Succession  Committee utilized two
different compensation surveys of base salary adjustments to determine the scope
of changes to base salaries. The objective of this structured approach to salary
adjustments  is to  remain  competitive  in the  recruitment  and  retention  of
management within the marketplace.  In 2006, the application of this process led
to base salaries  companywide being increased on average 3.54% compared to 2005.
The 2006 base  salaries  resulting  from this  process  for the named  executive
officers were: Jeffrey E. Smith, $146,581; Katrinka V. Hart, $74,304; E. Richard
Mahan, $74,794; Larry E. Miller, $74,304; and Scott W. Shockey, $48,378.
                                       12

     In 2006, the Compensation and Management  Succession Committee reviewed the
base salary and range adjustment data from the 2006 editions of the compensation
surveys  referenced  above.  After  analysis  of the survey  data,  the  Company
adjusted the pay ranges of selected positions in order to reflect changes in the
marketplace.  As  in  years  past,  each  officer's  base  salary  increase  was
determined  by their  evaluation  performance  rating and the  position of their
total  compensation  within the  marketplace  range. In 2007, the application of
this process led to base salaries  companywide  being increased on average 3.53%
over 2006. The 2007 base salary resulting from this process for Jeffrey E. Smith
was $151,902.  The application of this process for the following named executive
officers,  including an amount  necessary to adjust the existing range midpoints
to within +/- 10% of the  benchmark,  determined  the following  base  salaries:
Katrinka V. Hart, $89,658; E. Richard Mahan, $89,658; Larry E. Miller,  $89,658;
and Scott W. Shockey, $58,340.

Bonuses

     The objectives of the bonus component of the Company's compensation program
are to: (i)  motivate  executive  officers and other  employees  and reward such
persons for the  accomplishment  of both short-term and long-term  objectives of
the Company and the Bank, (ii) reinforce a strong  performance  orientation with
differentiation  and  variability in individual  awards based on contribution to
both  annual  and  long-range   business  results  and  (iii)  provide  a  fully
competitive   compensation  package  which  will  attract,  reward,  and  retain
individuals of the highest quality.

     The  aggregate  bonus  paid  annually  to  employees,  both  executive  and
non-executive, has two elements: a component based on progress toward long range
business  objectives  (the "Long Range  Bonus") and a component  based on annual
results (the "Annual Results  Bonus").  The objective of these two components is
to provide an appropriate balance in emphasis between long-term  performance and
short-term results.

     The  aggregate  amount  of the Long  Range  Bonus  available  for  award to
employees  (both  executive  and  non-executive)  is  determined by the Board of
Directors in December of each year upon the  recommendation  of the Compensation
and  Management  Succession  Committee  and  solely  in the  discretion  of that
Committee and the full Board based upon the performance and financial  condition
of the Company during the year to date.  Neither the aggregate  bonus amount nor
any individual  bonus amount is based upon any objective  goals or targets.  The
amount  of the  Long  Range  Bonus  in 2006,  which  was  paid to 76  employees,
including  the  named  executive  officers,  is a  function  of  the  individual
employee's job performance  using the Evaluation  Criteria  referenced above and
the  employee's  job grade.  The Board of  Directors  establishes  a grid at the
beginning of the year setting  forth the relative  allocation  of the  aggregate
bonus to be paid to each  employee  based  on the  Evaluation  Criteria  and job
grade, but the aggregate  amount to be allocated and the individual  performance
rating based upon the Evaluation  Criteria are not  determined  until the end of
the year and are  determined  solely in the discretion of the  Compensation  and
Management Succession Committee and the full Board of Directors.

     The aggregate amount of and the specific goals for the Annual Results Bonus
are approved  annually by the Board upon the  recommendation of the Compensation
and Management Succession Committee. The specific goals that are established for
the Annual  Results Bonus can consist of one or more  specific  targets such as:
efficiency ratio, return on assets, return on equity, earnings per share growth,
and asset quality.  The specific goals for fiscal 2006,  which were the same for
all named executive officers, were target levels of: net earnings,  earnings per
share  growth,  return  on  assets,  return on  equity,  asset  quality  and the
efficiency  ratio. The bonuses are paid only if the targets are met; there is no
partial  payment or extra payment for  achieving to a lesser or greater  degree.
The Compensation and Management  Succession Committee met with Mr. Smith and the
other named executive officers four times during 2006 to review their individual
performance as well as the progress  toward the  accomplishment  of these annual
results goals.  The  evaluation by the  Compensation  and Management  Succession
Committee resulted in no Annual Results Bonus for 2006.

     Goals  for the 2007  Annual  Results  Bonus  consist  of  target  levels of
earnings per share growth,  return on assets,  return on equity,  asset quality,
and the efficiency ratio.

Retirement Plans

     The Board of Directors has established  several  retirement plans, in order
to both  provide  competitive  compensation  arrangements  to  attract  talented
employees, and also to provide a valuable incentive to retain talented employees
once  employed.   Management  expects  that  the  plans  not  funded  by  annual
contributions  will be funded by bank owned life insurance  policies  previously
purchased on the lives of all directors and certain officers of the Company.

     Profit Sharing  Retirement  Plan. The Company  sponsors a qualified  Profit
Sharing Retirement Plan for all of its employees,  including the named executive
officers.  Each  employee who is at least 21 years of age, has  completed  1,000
hours  and one year of  service  to the  Company  and its  subsidiaries,  and is
employed on the last day of the plan year is qualified to participate in the
                                       13

Profit Sharing Retirement Plan. The Board of Directors  determines the amount to
contribute to the Profit Sharing Retirement Plan each December in its discretion
based on the  performance  and financial  condition of the Company.  In December
2006, the Board of Directors voted to contribute  $171,439 to the Profit Sharing
Retirement Plan. Each participant received a pro rata share of this contribution
as well as a pro rata share of reallocated  forfeitures (such pro rata share, in
each  case,  based upon such  participant's  eligible  compensation).  The named
executive  officers' share of the 2006 contribution and reallocated  forfeitures
is reported in the Summary Compensation Table on page 16.

     401(k)  Retirement Plan. The Company sponsors a qualified 401(k) Plan under
the Profit Sharing Retirement Plan.  Participants'  qualifications are identical
to those of the Profit Sharing Retirement Plan. In cases where participants made
deferrals to the 401(k) Plan, the Company made a matching  contribution equal to
25% of the amount deferred by each employee,  up to a maximum deferral amount of
4% of the participant's  eligible  compensation under the 401(k) Plan. The named
executive  officers' share of the 2006 contribution and reallocated  forfeitures
is reported in the Summary Compensation Table on page 16.

     Employee  Stock  Ownership  Plan.  The Company  sponsors an Employee  Stock
Ownership  Plan  (the  "ESOP")  for all of its  employees,  including  the named
executive  officers.  Participant  qualifications  are identical to those of the
Profit Sharing Retirement Plan. The Board of Directors  determines the amount to
contribute to the ESOP each December in its discretion  based on the performance
and financial condition of the Company. In December 2006, the Board of Directors
voted  to  contribute   $342,876  to  the  ESOP.  Each  participant's  share  of
contributions  and  reallocated  forfeitures  is also  identical to those of the
Profit Sharing Retirement Plan. The named executive  officers' share of the 2006
contributions   and   reallocated   forfeitures   is  reported  in  the  Summary
Compensation Table on page 16.

         Executive Deferred Compensation Plan. The Company maintains a
non-qualified executive deferred compensation plan for all the Company's
executive officers. Participants in the deferred compensation plan, upon
reaching age 65, are eligible to receive a distribution of their contributions,
plus accrued interest earned at a designated rate on reinvestment of the
contributions. In 2006, the rate paid was 6%. If a participant dies before
reaching age 65 and the participant qualifies, the distribution will be made to
the participant's designated beneficiary in an amount equal to what the
participant would have accumulated if the participant had reached age 65 and had
continued to make contributions to the plan. The Company believes that the cost
of providing the benefit will be offset by earnings on life insurance contracts
associated with the benefit.

     Supplemental   Executive   Retirement   Plan.   The  Company   maintains  a
non-qualified  supplemental executive retirement plan (the SERP), titled "Salary
Continuation Agreement" for certain of its executive officers.  Participation in
the SERP is at the  discretion  of the Board and is designed to  supplement  the
retirement  benefits of such  participants.  Currently,  Jeffrey E. Smith is the
only executive  officer who  participates in the SERP. The amount of Mr. Smith's
annual benefit is $117,100 if Mr.  Smith's  employment is terminated on or after
age 65 for any reason  other than  termination  for "cause".  Cause  consists of
gross  negligence,  gross  neglect  of duty,  commission  of a  felony  or gross
misdemeanor  involving  moral  turpitude,  or fraud,  disloyalty,  dishonesty or
willful  violation  of any  law  or  significant  Company  policy  committed  in
connection with Mr. Smith's employment and resulting in an adverse effect on the
Company.

     If Mr.  Smith's  employment  is terminated  other than for cause,  or other
involuntary  non-disability  early  termination  before  normal  retirement  age
(because Mr. Smith is eligible for early  retirement),  the Company will pay Mr.
Smith an amount  determined  by  calculating  a 20-year  fixed  annuity from the
Company's  accrued  liability,  crediting  interest on the unpaid  balance at an
annual rate of 7.5%,  compounded monthly. The payments would be made monthly for
20 years.

     In the event of Mr. Smith's involuntary termination other than after normal
retirement age or due to death,  disability or cause,  the amount payable is the
accrued  liability  based on Mr. Smith's  compensation  for the plan year ending
immediately prior to the date in which termination  occurs,  which is determined
calculating a 20-year fixed annuity from the accrual balance, crediting interest
on the unpaid  balance at an annual  rate of 7.5  percent,  compounded  monthly.
Payments would be made monthly for 20 years.

     Director Retirement Plan. As a Director,  Jeffrey E. Smith is a participant
in the Director  Retirement Plan.  Participants in the Director Retirement Plan,
upon  reaching age 70, are eligible to receive 50% of the three (3) prior years'
average total Directors' compensation. The benefit is payable for 120 months for
Directors  with 10 years of service  or less.  The  benefit  is payable  for 240
months for  Directors  with more than 10 years of  service.  If a Director  dies
during  active  service,  payment  will  be made  to the  Director's  designated
beneficiary  in an amount equal to what the Director would have received had the
Director  reached age 70,  except the benefit term will be reduced to 60 months.
If the Director dies during the payment of benefits, payment will be made to the
Director's  designated  beneficiary  for the lesser of the remaining  term or 60
additional  months.  The Company believes that the cost of providing the benefit
will be offset by  earnings  on life  insurance  contracts  associated  with the
benefit.  If Mr.  Smith had retired at December 31,  2006,  his monthly  payment
would have been $905.56 for 240 months. If he had died on that date, his monthly
benefit would have been $905.56 for 60 months.
                                       14

Life Insurance

     Executive Life  Insurance.  In addition to optional life insurance that the
Company makes available to all employees,  the Company  maintains life insurance
on each of the named executive officers of the Company on which the Company paid
the entire  premium upon purchase in 1996. The Company is the sole owner of each
policy,  but the Company has entered into an agreement with each named executive
officer  agreeing to provide to such officer's  designated  beneficiary from the
proceeds  of the  policy  an  amount  equal to the  lesser  of (i) two times the
officer's highest total annual compensation during any calendar year,  including
the year of the officer's  death,  or (ii) the face amount of the life insurance
policy. The Company agrees not to sell, surrender or transfer the policy without
giving the  officer  the option to  purchase  the policy for the cash  surrender
value of the policy.

     The following  table sets forth the amount that would have been payable for
each named executive officer covered by Executive Life Insurance at December 31,
2006:

                                 Benefit at
Name                         December 31, 2006
----                         -----------------
Jeffrey E. Smith                  $477,996
E. Richard Mahan                   254,184
Larry E. Miller, II                252,218
Katrinka V. Hart                   252,218

     Director Life Insurance.  The Company maintains a life insurance policy for
all Directors, with a death benefit of two times annual Director fees at time of
death  reduced by 35% at age 65 and 50% at age 70. The life  insurance  policies
terminate  upon  retirement.  Mr.  Smith as an employee of a  subsidiary  of the
Company,  is excluded from this benefit  under the terms of the Company's  group
term life insurance program.

Other Benefits

     Executive  officers of the Company also receive  benefits  available to all
employees,  including group term life insurance,  health insurance, short & long
term  disability,   flexible   compensation/cafeteria  plan  and  optional  life
insurance.

     The decision-making  process and compensation philosophy of the Company and
the Bank were considered by the Compensation and Management Succession Committee
when  determining  2006  compensation  for the named  executive  officers of the
Company and the Bank.  The  Compensation  and  Management  Succession  Committee
believes that the  compensation  earned by the named executive  officers in 2006
was fair and reasonable when compared with executive  compensation levels in the
banking industry as reported in the marketplace range developed.

Tax Deductibility of Compensation

     Section  162(m) of the  Internal  Revenue  Code  generally  disallows a tax
deduction to public corporations for non-qualifying compensation in excess of $1
million paid to any such persons in any fiscal year. Neither the Company nor the
Bank has a policy  requiring that all compensation in 2006 and thereafter to the
covered officers be deductible under Section 162(m).  The Boards of Directors of
both companies do, however,  consider  carefully the after-tax cost and value to
the Company and the Bank of all compensation.

             COMPENSATION AND MANAGEMENT SUCCESSION COMMITTEE REPORT

     The  Compensation  and  Management  Succession  Committee  has reviewed and
discussed  this   Compensation   Discussion  and  Analysis  with  the  Company's
Management. Based on this review and discussion, the committee recommends to the
Board of Directors that the Compensation  Discussion and Analysis be included in
the Company's proxy statement and Annual Report on Form 10-K.

Submitted by:
Compensation and Management Succession Committee Members

Thomas E. Wiseman, Chairman
W. Lowell Call
Robert H. Eastman
                                       15

                       Summary Compensation Table for 2006

     The following table summarizes the total  compensation paid to or earned by
each of the named  executive  officers for the three fiscal years ended December
31, 2006:


----------------------------- ------- ------------ ---------- -------- -------- ------------- -------------- -------------- --------
          Name and             Year     Salary       Bonus    Stock    Option    Non-Equity     Change in      All Other      Total
     Principal Position                 ($) (1)     ($) (2)   Awards   Awards    Incentive       Pension     Compensation      ($)
                                                               ($)      ($)        Plan        Value and       ($) (4)
                                                                                Compensation  Nonqualified
                                                                                    ($)         Deferred
                                                                                              Compensation
                                                                                                Earnings
                                                                                                 ($) (3)
            (a)                (b)        (c)         (d)       (e)      (f)        (g)            (h)            (i)          (j)
----------------------------- ------- ------------ ---------- -------- -------- ------------- -------------- -------------- --------
                                                                                                 
Jeffrey E. Smith               2006   $165,481(5)    $48,945     --       --          --          $92,243        $12,508    $319,177
   President and               2005    161,364(5)     73,358     --       --          --           83,472         12,408     330,602
   Chief Executive Officer     2004    150,442(5)     83,553     --       --          --           78,337         12,587     324,919
----------------------------- ------- ------------ ---------- -------- -------- ------------- -------------- -------------- --------
Scott W. Shockey               2006        48,378     34,024     --       --          --             --            4,803      87,205
   Vice President and          2005        46,044     44,118     --       --          --             --            5,061      95,223
   Chief Financial Officer     2004        43,940     40,012     --       --          --             --            5,292      89,244
----------------------------- ------- ------------ ---------- -------- -------- ------------- -------------- -------------- --------
E. Richard Mahan               2006        74,794     36,691     --       --          --             --            6,486     117,971
   Senior Vice President       2005        70,942     52,150     --       --          --             --            7,213     130,305
   and Secretary               2004        69,279     53,554     --       --          --             --            7,355     130,188
----------------------------- ------- ------------ ---------- -------- -------- ------------- -------------- -------------- --------
Larry E. Miller, II            2006        74,304     36,672     --       --          --             --            7,171     118,147
   Senior Vice President       2005        70,718     51,667     --       --          --             --            7,369     129,754
   and Treasurer               2004        67,790     48,266     --       --          --             --            7,202     123,258
----------------------------- ------- ------------ ---------- -------- -------- ------------- -------------- -------------- --------
Katrinka V. Hart               2006        74,304     36,672     --       --          --             --            6,441     117,417
   Senior Vice President       2005        70,718     51,667     --       --          --             --            7,108     129,493
   and Risk Management Officer 2004        68,468     48,266     --       --          --             --            7,339     124,073
----------------------------- ------- ------------ ---------- -------- -------- ------------- -------------- -------------- --------


(1)      Base salaries for the named executive officers are described on page 12

(2)      Bonuses for the named executive officers are described on page 13.

(3)      The amounts in column (h) reflect the actuarial increase in the present
         value of Mr. Smith's  benefits  under the Salary  Continuation Plan and
         the Director Retirement Plan, each of which is described on page 14, as
         follows:

                         Actuarial Increase in        Actuarial Increase in
                       Salary Continuation Plan      Director Retirement Plan
                       ------------------------      ------------------------
                 2006          $89,597                         $2,646
                 2005           81,080                          2,392
                 2004           76,179                          2,158

(4) The amount shown in column (i) reflects for each named executive officer:

o  Company contributions  and reallocated  forfeitures under  the Profit Sharing
   Retirement Plan, which is described on page 13.
o  Company  contributions  and reallocated  forfeitures  under  the 401(k) Plan,
   which  is  provided  for  under  the Profit Sharing  Retirement  Plan  and is
   described on page 14.
o  Company  contributions and  reallocated forfeitures  under the Employee Stock
   Ownership Plan, which is described on page 14.
o  Instructor Fees  for teaching a  class  to employees, and  Service Awards for
   being employed by the Bank for a certain number of years.

(5) Includes Director's fees received  by Mr. Smith totaling $18,900 in 2006 and
   2005; and $19,550 in 2004.
                                       16

                            Pension Benefits for 2006

     The following table shows the present value of accumulated benefits payable
to the only named executive officer who received pension benefits in 2006:


-------------------------- --------------------------------- --------------------- ----------------------- -------------------------
           Name                       Plan Name                Number of Years       Present Value of        Payments During Last
                                                               Credited Service     Accumulated Benefit          Fiscal Year
                                                                     (#)                   ($)                       ($)
           (a)                           (b)                         (c)                   (d)                       (e)
-------------------------- --------------------------------- --------------------- ----------------------- -------------------------
                                                                                                
Jeffrey E. Smith           SERP                                       10                 $427,289                    --
                           Director Retirement Plan                   10                   16,304                    --
-------------------------- --------------------------------- --------------------- ----------------------- -------------------------

     Descriptions  of the SERP and the  Director  Retirement  Plan are set forth
under  the  headings  "Compensation   Discussion  and  Analysis  -  Supplemental
Executive Retirement Plan" and "Compensation  Discussion and Analysis - Director
Retirement Plan" on page 14. The present value of accumulated benefits under the
two plans is calculated based upon the discounted  present value of payments for
20 years discounted by 6% per year.

                   Nonqualified Deferred Compensation for 2006

     The following table describes the  nonqualified  deferred  compensation for
the named  executive  officers who  participated.  A description of the Deferred
Compensation Plan is set forth under the headings  "Compensation  Discussion and
Analysis - Executive Deferred Compensation Plan" on page 14.


------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
        Name              Executive            Registrant        Aggregate Earnings         Aggregate          Aggregate Balance
                       Contributions in     Contributions in         in Last FY           Withdrawals/            at Last FYE
                           Last FY               Last FY                 ($)              Distributions               ($)
                             ($)                   ($)                                         ($)

        (a)                (b) (1)                 (c)                   (d)                   (e)                    (f)
-------------------- -------------------- --------------------- ----------------------- ---------------------- ---------------------
                                                                                                    
Jeffrey E. Smith            $10,000                --                   $8,396                 --                    $158,052
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Scott W. Shockey              5,000                --                      309                 --                      10,321
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Katrinka V. Hart              7,500                --                    3,914                 --                      76,449
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
E. Richard Mahan             10,000                --                    7,554                 --                     143,182
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

(1)  Amounts represented in column (b) are included in column (c) of the Summary
     Compensation Table on page 16.

Post-termination or Change in Control Compensation

     Neither  the Company nor any of its  subsidiaries  has  executed a separate
employment,  severance or change in control  agreement with any of the executive
officers of the Company.

     Certain  compensation  plans  provide  benefits  payable upon  termination.
Benefits  payable to the named  executive  officers upon  termination  under the
Executive Deferred  Compensation Plan described under the heading  "Compensation
Discussion  and Analysis - Retirement  Plans - Executive  Deferred  Compensation
Plan"  and in the  Nonqualified  Deferred  Compensation  Plan  table on page 17.
Benefits  payable to Mr. Smith under the SERP and the Director  Retirement  Plan
are  described  under  the  heading  "Compensation  Discussion  and  Analysis  -
Retirement Plans - Supplemental  Executive Retirement Plan" on page 14 and under
the heading "Compensation  Discussion and Analysis - Retirement Plans - Director
Retirement  Plan" on page 14 and are set forth in the Pension  Benefits table on
page 17.  Benefits  payable to named  executive  officers  under  executive  and
director life insurance  policies are described under the heading  "Compensation
Discussion and Analysis - Executive Life Insurance" and "Compensation Discussion
and Analysis - Director Life Insurance" on page 15.

     Regardless of the manner in which a named  executive  officer's  employment
terminates, the officer will be entitled to receive amounts earned during his or
her employment under the Profit Sharing Retirement Plan, the 401(k) Plan and the
ESOP. Named
                                       17

executive  officers  will also be entitled to benefits  upon death or disability
under group plans available to all employees of the Company or the Bank.

Director Compensation

     All of the  Directors  of the Company  also serve as Directors of the Bank.
Members of the Board of Directors of the Company receive  compensation for their
services  rendered as Directors  of the Bank,  not the  Company.  In 2006,  each
Director  who was not an  employee  of the  Company  or any of its  subsidiaries
received  $550 per  month  for his or her  service  as a member  of the Board of
Directors of the Bank.  Directors who were employees of one of the  subsidiaries
of the Company received $350 per month in 2006 for their services.  In addition,
each  Director of the Bank received an annual  retainer of $14,700 in 2006.  The
retainer was pro-rated for time served for new Directors of the Bank.

     In  January  2005,  the  Board of  Directors,  upon  recommendation  of the
Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee,  established the position of Lead
Director. The Lead Director's  responsibilities are to chair Board and committee
meetings  in the  absence  of the Chief  Executive  Officer as well as chair the
monthly meetings of the independent  Directors.  Thomas E. Wiseman has served as
Lead  Director  since the  position's  establishment.  In  addition  to the fees
outlined above,  Mr. Wiseman  received $18,000 for his services as Lead Director
in fiscal 2006.

     Each non-employee  Director who was a member of the Executive  Committee of
the Bank  (Steven  B.  Chapman,  Robert H.  Eastman,  Harold A.  Howe,  Brent A.
Saunders and Thomas E. Wiseman) received fees of $36,000 in 2006. This figure is
pro-rated for time served for new members.  Executive  Committee members who are
employees of the Bank (Jeffrey E. Smith,  Chairman)  receive no compensation for
serving on the Executive  Committee.  The Executive Committee of the Bank met 37
times in 2006.

     The Company  maintains a life  insurance  policy for all  Directors  with a
death benefit of two times annual Director fees at time of death, reduced by 35%
at  age 65 and  50% at age  70.  The  life  insurance  policies  terminate  upon
retirement.

     In December 1996,  life  insurance  contracts were purchased by the Company
for all  Directors  and  certain  officers.  The  Company  is the  owner  of the
contracts.  The purpose of these  contracts  was to replace a current group life
insurance program for executive officers, implement a deferred compensation plan
for Directors and executive officers,  implement a Director retirement plan, and
implement a supplemental retirement plan for certain officers.

     Participants in the deferred  compensation  plan, upon reaching age 70, are
eligible to receive a distribution of their contributions, plus accrued interest
earned  at  a  rate  on  reinvestment  of  the  contributions  that  is  not  an
above-market  preferential  rate. In 2006 the rate paid was 6%. If a participant
dies before reaching age 70 and the participant qualifies, the distribution will
be made to the participant's  designated  beneficiary in an amount equal to what
the participant would have accumulated if the participant had reached age 70 and
had continued to make contributions to the plan.

     Participants  in the Director  retirement  plan,  upon reaching age 70, are
eligible to receive 50% of the three (3) prior years'  average total  Directors'
compensation.  The benefit is payable for 120 months for Directors with 10 years
of service or less.  The  benefit is payable for 240 months for  Directors  with
more than 10 years of service. If a Director dies during active service, payment
will be made to the Director's designated beneficiary in an amount equal to what
the Director  would have  received had the Director  reached age 70,  except the
benefit  term will be reduced  to 60 months.  If the  Director  dies  during the
payment  of  benefits,  payment  will  be  made  to  the  Director's  designated
beneficiary for the lesser of the remaining term or 60 additional months.
                                       18

     The  following  table  summarizes  the  compensation  paid to  non-employee
Directors for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2006:


                         Director Compensation for 2006
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
         Name             Fees Earned     Stock      Option      Non-Equity       Change in Pension        All Other       Total
                              or          Awards     Awards       Incentive     Value and Nonqualified   Compensation       ($)
                         Paid in Cash      ($)         ($)          Plan        Deferred Compensation         ($)
                              ($)                               Compensation           Earnings
                                                                     ($)                 ($)

          (a)                 (b)          (c)         (d)           (e)                 (f)                (g) (1)         (h)
---------------------- ------------------ ---------- ----------- -------------- ------------------------- --------------- ----------
                                                                                                      
Anna P. Barnitz              $21,300          --         --            --                   $1,079            $114         $22,493
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
W. Lowell Call                21,300          --         --            --                   24,390              70          45,760
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Steven B. Chapman             57,300          --         --            --                    4,445             327          62,072
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Robert E. Daniel              21,300          --         --            --                   16,477              74          37,851
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Robert H. Eastman             57,300          --         --            --                    9,582             613          67,495
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harold A. Howe                57,300          --         --            --                    2,875             327          60,502
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Brent A. Saunders             57,300          --         --            --                      485             427          58,212
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Roger D. Williams             21,300          --         --            --                    4,162             114          25,576
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lannes C. Williamson          21,300          --         --            --                    5,872             114          27,286
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thomas E. Wiseman             75,300          --         --            --                      527             362          76,189
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

(1)  Consists of the incremental cost of  group term life  insurance coverage on
     the lives of  the Directors;  and Service Awards for serving  as a Director
     for certain number of years.

                 CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS

     The Bank has had and expects to have in the future banking  transactions in
the ordinary course of the Bank's business with some of the Directors,  officers
and  principal  shareholders  of the  Company and  entities  with which they are
associated.  The Board of Directors  has  determined  that all of the  directors
except Mr. Smith, Mr. Howe, and Mr. Saunders are "independent" under the listing
standards  of  Nasdaq.  In  determining  independence,  the  Board of  Directors
considered  loan and  deposit  relationships  with each  Director.  The rules of
Nasdaq do not deem such relationships to disqualify a Director from being deemed
independent. In addition, all loans and other extensions of credit were made and
deposits  accepted  in  the  ordinary  course  of  business  and  were  made  on
substantially the same terms (including  interest rates and collateral) as those
prevailing at the time for comparable transactions with other persons.  Further,
in  management's  opinion,  the loans did not  involve  more than normal risk of
collectibility  or present other  unfavorable  features.  As of the date of this
Proxy Statement, all of such loans were performing loans. The Board of Directors
does not believe such  relationships  interfere with the Directors'  exercise of
independent judgment in carrying out their responsibilities as Directors.

     The Board of  Directors  also  considered  the  transactions  described  in
"Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider  Participation",  rental payments
made to Mr. Eastman,  and insurance  premiums paid to The Wiseman  Agency,  Inc.
(the "Wiseman  Agency") and  determined  that such  relationships,  which do not
disqualify a Director from being deemed  independent,  do not interfere with the
Directors'   exercise   of   independent   judgment   in   carrying   out  their
responsibilities as Directors.

     Any proposed  loan between the Bank and a Director or executive  officer of
the Company is approved by the full Board of Directors.  The Executive Committee
approved  the payment of  insurance  premiums to the Wiseman  Agency.  The Chief
Executive  Officer approved the issuance of promissory notes from the Company to
the Wiseman Agency and to Mr.  Eastman.  All of such related party  transactions
entered into since January 1, 2006, have been ratified by the Audit Committee.

     The Board of  Directors  adopted a written  policy in March 2007  requiring
transactions over $120,000  involving the Company or a subsidiary of the Company
and a "related party" with a direct or indirect material interest to be approved
or ratified by the Audit
                                       19

Committee.  The Audit  Committee's  approval must be based on its  determination
that the transaction,  first, is in or not inconsistent  with the best interests
of the  Company,  and  second,  is on terms  comparable  to those  that could be
obtained in arm's  length  dealings  with an unrelated  third  party,  or is for
products or services from a related party of a nature,  quantity or quality,  or
on other terms,  that are not readily  available  from other  sources.  "Related
parties" include directors,  executive officers, beneficial holders of more than
5% of the  outstanding  common  shares of the Company,  their  immediate  family
members,  and firms,  corporations  and other entities in which any of them have
certain relationships.

     Brent  A.  Saunders   rendered  legal  services  to  the  Company  and  its
subsidiaries  during the  Company's  2006  fiscal year and is expected to render
legal  services to the Company and its  subsidiaries  during the Company's  2007
fiscal year.

Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation

     The  members  of  the  Company's  Compensation  and  Management  Succession
Committee during 2006 were Messrs. Wiseman, Call and Eastman. From time to time,
the Company  accepts  loans from  various  persons to raise  capital for ongoing
operations  and to fund the growth of the  Company and its  subsidiaries.  These
loans are evidenced by promissory notes which are sold by the Company in private
placements to accredited investors without registration under the Securities Act
of 1933,  as  amended.  In June  2005,  the  Company  issued a note to Robert H.
Eastman,  a  Director  of the  Company  and a  member  of the  Compensation  and
Management  Succession  Committee,  and his  spouse in the  aggregate  principal
amount of $1,000,000.  The principal  amount of the note was repaid in full upon
its maturity in December 2006 together with interest.

     The Company issued seven separate notes to the Wiseman Agency from November
2005 through November 2006 in the principal  amount of $577,000 each.  Thomas E.
Wiseman,  a  Director  of the  Company  and a  member  of the  Compensation  and
Management  Succession  Committee,  is the President of the Wiseman Agency.  Mr.
Wiseman and members of his immediate family own the Wiseman Agency.  Each of the
notes was repaid upon its maturity with interest in fiscal 2006.

                             AUDIT COMMITTEE MATTERS

Report of the Audit  Committee  of the Board of  Directors  for the Fiscal  Year
Ended December 31, 2006

     The Audit  Committee has  submitted  the following  report for inclusion in
this proxy statement:

Role of the Audit Committee,  the Independent  Registered Public Accounting Firm
and Management

     The Audit  Committee  consists of four Directors who qualify as independent
under Nasdaq  Marketplace Rules 4200(a)(15) and 4350(d)(2) as well as under Rule
10A-3 promulgated  under the Exchange Act. The Audit Committee  operates under a
written charter adopted by the Board of Directors.

     The Audit Committee  appoints the Company's  independent  registered public
accounting firm and oversees the Company's  financial and reporting processes on
behalf of the Board of Directors.  Management is  responsible  for the Company's
consolidated  financial  statements and its  accounting and financial  reporting
processes,  including the establishment and maintenance of an adequate system of
internal  control over financial  reporting.  Management is also responsible for
preparing its report on the  establishment and maintenance of, and assessment of
the effectiveness of, the Company's  internal control over financial  reporting.
Crowe Chizek and Company LLC ("Crowe Chizek"), the independent registered public
accounting firm employed by the Company for the 2006 fiscal year, is responsible
for auditing the Company's  consolidated financial statements in accordance with
the standards of the Public Company  Accounting  Oversight Board (United States)
and  issuing  its  attestation   report  on   management's   assessment  of  the
effectiveness of the Company's internal control over financial reporting.

Review and Discussion  with  Management and the  Independent  Registered  Public
Accounting Firm

     As part of its oversight responsibilities, the Audit Committee reviewed and
discussed with management the audited  consolidated  financial statements of the
Company for the year ended  December  31, 2006,  including a  discussion  of the
quality, and not just the acceptability,  of the accounting  principles applied,
the  reasonableness  of significant  judgments and the clarity of disclosures in
the audited  financial  statements.  The Audit  Committee  also  discussed  with
management  and Crowe  Chizek the adequacy and  effectiveness  of the  Company's
internal control over financial  reporting and related  accounting and financial
controls.  The Audit  Committee also discussed with  management and Crowe Chizek
the interim financial and other information  contained in the Company's earnings
releases and SEC filings.
                                       20

     The Audit Committee discussed with Crowe Chizek the matters required by the
standards of the Public  Company  Accounting  Oversight  Board (United  States),
including  those  described in Statement on Auditing  Standards  Nos. 61 and 90,
Communication with Audit Committees,  and, with and without management  present,
reviewed  and  discussed  the  results  of  Crowe  Chizek's  examination  of the
Company's consolidated financial statements.

     The  Audit   Committee   also  discussed  with  Crowe  Chizek  that  firm's
independence from the Company and its management.  The Audit Committee  obtained
from Crowe  Chizek a formal  written  statement,  consistent  with  Independence
Standards Board Standard No. 1., Independence Discussions with Audit Committees,
describing  all  relationships  between the Company and Crowe  Chizek that might
bear on Crowe Chizek's  independence.  The Audit Committee  discussed with Crowe
Chizek any  relationships or services that might affect that firm's  objectivity
and satisfied itself as to Crowe Chizek's independence.

Management's Representations and Audit Committee Recommendations

     Management  has  represented  to the  Audit  Committee  that the  Company's
audited  consolidated  financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2006
were prepared in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the
United States.  The Audit  Committee has reviewed and discussed with  management
and Crowe Chizek the audited consolidated financial statements, and management's
report  on  the  establishment  and  maintenance  of,  and  assessments  of  the
effectiveness of, the Company's internal control over financial reporting. Based
on the reviews and discussions  outlined above, the Audit Committee  recommended
to the Board of Directors that the audited financial statements and management's
report  on  the   establishment  and  maintenance  of,  and  assessment  of  the
effectiveness of, the Company's  internal control over financial  reporting,  be
included in the  Company's  Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended
December 31, 2006.

Submitted by:
Audit Committee Members

Steven B. Chapman, CPA; Chairman
Anna P. Barnitz
W. Lowell Call
Lannes C. Williamson

Pre-Approval of Services  Performed by Independent  Registered Public Accounting
Firm

     Under  applicable SEC rules, the Audit Committee is required to pre-approve
the audit and non-audit services performed by the independent  registered public
accounting  firm in  order  to  assure  that  they  do not  impair  that  firm's
independence  from the Company.  The SEC's rules  specify the types of non-audit
services that an independent  registered  public accounting firm may not provide
to its audit  client and  establish  the Audit  Committee's  responsibility  for
administration of the engagement of the independent registered public accounting
firm.  Accordingly,  the Audit Committee has adopted, and the Board of Directors
has  ratified,   an  Audit  and  Non-Audit  Services  Pre-Approval  Policy  (the
"Pre-Approval  Policy"),  which sets  forth the  procedures  and the  conditions
pursuant to which services proposed to be performed by the Company's independent
registered public accounting firm may be pre-approved.

     The purpose of the  Pre-Approval  Policy is to set forth the  procedures by
which the Audit Committee intends to fulfill its  responsibilities.  It does not
delegate  the  Audit  Committee's   responsibilities  to  pre-approve   services
performed by the independent registered public accounting firm to management.

     Consistent  with the SEC's  rules,  the  Pre-Approval  Policy  provides two
different approaches to pre-approving services.  Proposed services may either be
pre-approved  without  consideration  of specific  case-by-case  services by the
Audit Committee ("general pre-approval") or require the specific pre-approval of
the Audit  Committee  ("specific  pre-approval").  The  combination of these two
approaches  in the  Pre-Approval  Policy  results in an effective  and efficient
procedure to pre-approve services performed by the independent registered public
accounting  firm.  As set  forth in the  Pre-Approval  Policy,  unless a type of
service has received general pre-approval, it will require specific pre-approval
by the Audit  Committee  if it is to be provided by the  independent  registered
public accounting firm. Any proposed services exceeding pre-approved cost levels
or  budgeted  amounts  will  also  require  specific  pre-approval  by the Audit
Committee.

     The Audit Committee may delegate  either type of pre-approval  authority to
one or more of its members.  The member to whom such authority is delegated must
report, for informational purposes only, any pre-approval decisions to the Audit
Committee at its next scheduled meeting.
                                       21

     Appendices to the  Pre-Approval  Policy describe the services that have the
general   pre-approval  of  the  Audit  Committee.   The  term  of  any  general
pre-approval  is 12  months  from the date of  pre-approval,  unless  the  Audit
Committee considers a different period and states otherwise. The Audit Committee
will annually  review and  pre-approve  the services that may be provided by the
independent   registered  public  accounting  firm  without  obtaining  specific
pre-approval  from the  Audit  Committee.  The  Audit  Committee  will add to or
subtract from the list of general pre-approved services from time to time, based
on subsequent determinations.

     All requests or applications for services to be provided by the independent
registered  public  accounting firm that do not require specific approval by the
Audit  Committee  will be submitted to the Company's  internal  auditor and must
include a detailed  description  of the  services to be  rendered.  The internal
auditor will  determine  whether such  services are included  within the list of
services that have received the general pre-approval of the Audit Committee. The
Audit Committee will be informed on a timely basis of any such services rendered
by the independent registered public accounting firm.

     Requests or applications to provide services that require specific approval
by the Audit  Committee  will be  submitted  to the Audit  Committee by both the
independent registered public accounting firm and the internal auditor, and must
include  a joint  statement  as to  whether,  in  their  view,  the  request  or
application is consistent with the SEC's rules on auditor independence.

     The Audit  Committee  has  designated  the internal  auditor to monitor the
performance  of all  services  provided  by the  independent  registered  public
accounting  firm and to determine  whether such services are in compliance  with
the Pre-Approval Policy. The internal auditor will report to the Audit Committee
on a periodic basis on the results of this monitoring. Both the internal auditor
and management  will  immediately  report to the chairman of the Audit Committee
any  breach  of the  Pre-Approval  Policy  that  comes to the  attention  of the
internal auditor or any member of management.

Services Rendered by Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

     In May 2006, the Audit  Committee  appointed the  accounting  firm of Crowe
Chizek and Company LLC ("Crowe  Chizek") to serve as the independent  registered
public  accounting firm of the Company for 2006. All of the services rendered by
Crowe Chizek to the Company during 2006 and 2005 were  pre-approved by the Audit
Committee.  Fees billed for  services  rendered by Crowe Chizek for each of 2006
and 2005 were:

Audit  Services.  The aggregate fees billed by Crowe Chizek for the audit of the
financial  statements  included  in the  Annual  Report on Form 10-K and for the
review of the financial  statements  included in our  quarterly  reports on Form
10-Q for our fiscal years ended  December 31, 2006 and 2005,  were  $194,250 and
$184,500, respectively.

Audit-Related  Fees.  Audit  related  fees  billed in 2006  totaled  $17,742 and
consisted of accounting,  disclosures  and other related  discussions  regarding
actual or  proposed  transactions.  For 2005,  Crowe  Chizek  provided  services
totaling  $20,125 for educational  materials  related to the requirements of SEC
rules or listing standards  promulgated  pursuant to the  Sarbanes-Oxley  Act of
2002, including database software license.

Tax Fees.  The aggregate  fees billed in each of 2006 and 2005 for  professional
services rendered by Crowe Chizek for tax compliance, tax advice or tax planning
were $15,250 and $12,175, respectively.

All Other Fees.  There were no fees or expenses billed by Crowe Chizek for 2006.
For 2005, Crowe Chizek provided  services totaling $3,560 related to educational
training of members of the Job Evaluation Committee and services totaling $5,000
related to providing  summarized  statistical industry survey data of salary and
wage information.

Notification of Appointment of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

     While the  Company is not  currently  considering  the  appointment  of any
independent registered public accounting firm other than Crowe Chizek, the Audit
Committee has not yet appointed an independent registered public accounting firm
for the 2007 fiscal year. The Audit Committee  intends to appoint a firm as soon
as practicable.  Crowe Chizek has served as the Company's independent registered
public   accounting   firm  since   1992.   The  Board  of   Directors   expects
representatives  of  Crowe  Chizek  will  be  present  at  the  Annual  Meeting.
Representatives of Crowe Chizek will have the opportunity to make a statement if
they desire to do so, and will be available to respond to appropriate questions.
                                       22

                            ANNUAL REPORT - FORM 10-K

     The Company will provide  without  charge to any  shareholder  of record on
March 20, 2007, on the written  request of any such  shareholder,  a copy of the
Company's  Annual  Report  on Form  10-K,  including  financial  statements  and
schedules thereto, required to be filed under the Exchange Act for the Company's
fiscal year ended December 31, 2006.  Such written request should be directed to
E. Richard Mahan,  Secretary,  Ohio Valley Banc Corp., P.O. Box 240, Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631, telephone number 1-800-468-6682 or 1-740-446-2631.


                            PROXY STATEMENT PROPOSALS

     Each year, the Board of Directors  submits its  nominations for election of
Directors  at  the  Annual  Meeting  of  Shareholders.  Other  proposals  may be
submitted by the Board of Directors or  shareholders  for inclusion in the proxy
materials for action at each year's annual meeting.  Any proposal submitted by a
shareholder  for inclusion in the proxy  materials for the 2008 Annual  Meeting,
presently  scheduled  for May 7, 2008,  must be  received  by the  Company on or
before  December 19, 2007. A shareholder  proposal  received  after December 19,
2007,  but on or  before  March 3,  2008,  will  not be  included  in the  proxy
materials  for the  2008  Annual  Meeting,  but may  still be  presented  by the
shareholder at the 2008 Annual Meeting. The individuals named as proxies for the
2008 Annual Meeting will be entitled to use their discretionary voting authority
on proposals  received after March 3, 2008, without any discussion of the matter
in the Company's proxy materials.

     Shareholders  desiring to nominate  candidates for election as directors at
the 2008 Annual  Meeting  must follow the  procedures  described in "ELECTION OF
DIRECTORS - Nominating Procedures."

                  REPORTS TO BE PRESENTED AT THE ANNUAL MEETING

     There will be presented at the Annual  Meeting the Company's  Annual Report
for the year ended December 31, 2006,  containing  financial statements for such
year and the  signed  opinion  of Crowe  Chizek  and  Company  LLC,  independent
registered  public  accounting firm, with respect to such financial  statements.
The Annual Report is not to be regarded as proxy  soliciting  material,  and the
Company's  management does not intend to ask, suggest or solicit any action from
the shareholders with respect to such Annual Report.

                    DELIVERY OF PROXY MATERIALS TO HOUSEHOLDS

     Pursuant to notice  delivered to eligible  shareholders  who share the same
address,  the Company and a number of brokers send only one proxy  statement and
the 2006 Annual  Report to  shareholders  residing at the same  address,  unless
different  instructions  have  been  received  from  the  affected  shareholder.
Accordingly,  those registered and beneficial  shareholders who share an address
will receive only one copy of the 2006 Annual Report and this proxy statement. A
separate  proxy and Notice of Annual  Meeting  will  continue to be included for
each shareholder at the shared address.

     Registered  shareholders  who share an address  and would like to receive a
separate 2006 Annual Report and/or a separate proxy statement, or have questions
regarding the householding  process,  may contact Deborah A. Carhart,  Assistant
Vice   President,   Shareholder   Relations,   by  calling   1-800-468-6682   or
1-740-446-2631;  or by a written  request  addressed to Ms.  Carhart at The Ohio
Valley Bank Company,  P.O. Box 240,  Gallipolis,  Ohio 45631; or by an e-mail to
InvestorRelations@ovbc.com. Promptly upon request, a separate 2006 Annual Report
and/or a separate  proxy  statement  will be sent.  By contacting  Ms.  Carhart,
registered  shareholders sharing an address can also (i) notify the Company that
the registered  shareholders  wish to receive  separate annual reports and proxy
statements  in the future or (ii)  request  delivery  of a single copy of annual
reports or proxy statements in the future if they are receiving multiple copies.
Beneficial   shareholders   should  contact  their   broker/dealers,   financial
institution,   or  other  record   holders  for  specific   information  on  the
householding process as it applies to those beneficial shareholders.

                                  OTHER MATTERS

     The only business which the Company's  management intends to present at the
Annual Meeting  consists of the matters set forth in this proxy  statement.  The
Company's  management  knows of no other matters to be brought before the Annual
Meeting by any other person or group.
                                       23

     If any other matters should  properly come before the Annual  Meeting,  the
proxy holders will vote on those matters in their discretion.

     All duly executed proxies received will be voted.

     Please  sign and date  the  enclosed  proxy  and  mail it  promptly  in the
enclosed envelope.

                                           BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

                                           /s/ Jeffrey E. Smith
                                           -------------------------------------
                                           Jeffrey E. Smith
                                           President and Chief Executive Officer

                                       24

                             OHIO VALLEY BANC CORP.
                    PROXY FOR ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                            TO BE HELD ON MAY 9, 2007

           THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

The  undersigned  holder(s)  of common  shares of Ohio  Valley  Banc Corp.  (the
"Company")  hereby appoints Thomas E. Wiseman and E. Richard Mahan,  and each of
them with full power of substitution to each, the true and lawful  attorneys and
proxies of the undersigned to vote all of the common shares of the Company which
the undersigned is entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting of Shareholders of the
Company, to be held at the Morris and Dorothy Haskins Ariel Theatre,  426 Second
Avenue,  Gallipolis,  Ohio,  on  Wednesday,  May 9,  2007 at 5:00  p.m.  Eastern
Daylight Saving Time, and at any adjournment(s) thereof, as follows:

1.  To elect the  following four (4) Directors  to the Board  of Directors for a
    term of three years each:

     THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE "FOR" ALL OF THE NOMINEES.

         Steven B. Chapman
         Robert E. Daniel
         Robert H. Eastman
         Jeffrey E. Smith

[ ] Vote For All  [ ] Withhold Authority to  Vote For all Nominee  [ ]  Vote for
all except _______________

2.  In their  discretion, the  individuals  designated  to vote  this proxy  are
    authorized  to  vote  upon  any  other  matter  (none known at  the  time of
    solicitation of  this proxy) which properly  comes before the Annual Meeting
    or any adjournment thereof.

WHERE A CHOICE IS INDICATED,  THE SHARES REPRESENTED BY THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED
OR NOT VOTED AS SPECIFIED.  UNLESS  INSTRUCTIONS TO THE CONTRARY ARE GIVEN,  THE
COMMON SHARES  REPRESENTED BY THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED "FOR" THE ELECTION OF THE
NOMINEES  LISTED ABOVE AS DIRECTORS  OF THE  COMPANY.  IF ANY OTHER  MATTERS ARE
PROPERLY  BROUGHT BEFORE THE ANNUAL MEETING OR ANY  ADJOURNMENT  THEREOF OR IF A
NOMINEE FOR  ELECTION AS A DIRECTOR  NAMED IN THE PROXY  STATEMENT  IS UNABLE TO
SERVE OR FOR GOOD CAUSE WILL NOT SERVE,  THE COMMON SHARES  REPRESENTED  BY THIS
PROXY WILL BE VOTED IN THE DISCRETION OF THE INDIVIDUALS DESIGNATED TO VOTE THIS
PROXY,  TO THE EXTENT  PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE  LAW, ON SUCH MATTERS OR FOR SUCH
SUBSTITUTE NOMINEE(S) AS THE DIRECTORS MAY RECOMMEND.

ALL  PROXIES  PREVIOUSLY  GIVEN  BY THE  UNDERSIGNED  ARE  HEREBY  REVOKED.  THE
UNDERSIGNED  HEREBY  ACKNOWLEDGES  RECEIPT OF THE  ACCOMPANYING  ANNUAL  REPORT,
NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING, AND PROXY STATEMENT FOR THE MAY 9, 2007 MEETING.






          (THIS PROXY CONTINUES AND MUST BE SIGNED ON THE REVERSE SIDE)

OHIO VALLEY BANC CORP.
420 Third Avenue
P.O. Box 240
Gallipolis, Ohio  45631



                                      No. of OVBC Shares:________
                                      Acct No. ________






Please indicate any address change above.


Please fill in,  sign,  and return this proxy in the enclosed  envelope.  Please
sign exactly as your name appears  hereon.  All joint owners  should sign.  When
signing as Attorney, Executor, Administrator,  Trustee, or Guardian, please give
full  title as such.  If  shareholder  is a  corporation,  please  sign the full
corporate name by authorized  officer.  If shareholder is a partnership,  please
sign in partnership name by authorized person.



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Shareholder Signature                                           Date



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Shareholder Signature                                           Date