The EU Pushes Hard for a Tokenised Euro in 2026
Europe has decided it cannot afford to wait any longer. While American dollar-backed stablecoins spread rapidly across the globe, the European Union is pushing hard to turn its own currency into a digital token, and the window to act is getting smaller by the day.
The European Central Bank is now at the centre of one of the most ambitious financial projects in the continent’s history. Its goal is straightforward but enormously complex to deliver: create a digital version of the euro that works on modern blockchain-based technology, can settle financial transactions instantly, and keeps Europe firmly in control of its own monetary future.
The effort is moving on two tracks at the same time. The first is a wholesale digital euro designed for banks and large financial institutions. Under a project called Pontos, the ECB plans to launch a settlement system that allows big financial transactions to be completed using tokenised central bank money by the third quarter of 2026.
This means banks will be able to buy, sell and settle assets, bonds, securities, and other financial instruments on digital platforms without leaving the safety of official central bank money. The full life cycle of a financial deal, from trading to settlement to custody, will happen on a single digital platform available around the clock.
The second track is a retail digital euro, a digital version of cash that ordinary people could use to pay for goods and services, send money to friends or shop online, whether they have an internet connection or not. The ECB confirmed that, assuming EU lawmakers pass the necessary legislation this year, a pilot programme could begin as early as mid-2027, with a full launch targeted for 2029.
The European Parliament took a major step forward in February, formally endorsing the digital euro project in a vote that described it as essential for protecting Europe’s monetary independence. Lawmakers warned that if digital payments were left entirely to private companies and non-European platforms, the continent risked losing control of how its citizens spend and receive money.
The driving fear behind all of this is dollar dominance. American stablecoins, digital tokens tied to the US dollar, already account for 99 per cent of all currency-backed stablecoins in the world. ECB President Christine Lagarde has repeatedly warned that if Europe does nothing, the dollar could quietly take over digital finance across the continent without a single shot being fired. #The EU Pushes Hard for a Tokenised Euro in 2026#
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