- The European Central Bank will select payment providers in early 2026 for a limited digital euro pilot scheduled to begin in the second half of 2027.
- The project aims to reduce Europe’s reliance on international card networks like Visa and Mastercard by keeping EU-licensed banks at the core of distribution.
- Merchant fees for the digital euro will be capped below international rates to stay competitive while supporting domestic payment systems like Bancomat and Bizum.
The European Central Bank (ECB) is finally preparing a limited digital euro pilot that would begin by selecting specific payment service providers in the first quarter of 2026, ahead of a 12-month test scheduled for the second half of 2027.
According to Reuters, ECB Executive Board member Piero Cipollone, the pilot would not only involve a limited group of payment service providers, but also merchants and the entire Eurosystem staff.
Cipollone said the digital euro is being designed to protect European card schemes and keep banks central to eurozone payments, adding that EU-licensed payment providers would sit at the core of distribution.
Related: Crypto ETPs Extend Outflow Streak as Bitcoin Funds Bleed $133M
Cipollone said the pilot would give participating firms an early operational advantage, including hands-on experience with onboarding, settlement and liquidity management. He added it should also help firms estimate future infrastructure, compliance and staffing costs, and allow participants to provide feedback that could shape the system’s design.
Is Europe Embracing The Digital Euro?
Cipollone framed the project as a response to multiple competitive pressures on banks’ role in payments, and said banks risk being displaced not only by stablecoins but also by other private solutions, pointing to Europe’s dependence on international card networks such as Visa and Mastercard.
The pilot is also intended to support domestic European payment projects, including Italy’s Bancomat card network and Spain’s Bizum peer-to-peer system. Cipollone said merchant fees on the digital euro network would be capped below those typically charged by international card networks, while remaining higher than fees on domestic schemes.
The ECB’s competitiveness framing aligns with comments from Deutsche Bundesbank President Joachim Nagel, who has backed a retail euro CBDC alongside euro-denominated stablecoins as complementary tools to increase Europe’s autonomy in payments.
In prepared remarks at the American Chamber of Commerce New Year’s reception in Frankfurt, Nagel said EU officials were working toward a retail CBDC and that euro stablecoins could also reduce reliance on external payment infrastructure.
Back in December, ECB’s President, Christine Lagarde, said the bank finished its technical and preparatory work, and that the European Council and the European Parliament were reviewing the plan. Now it looks like things are finally kicking off for Europe; however, we will have to wait until 2027.
Read more: Crypto Fear & Greed Index Hits Record Low After ‘10/10’ Liquidation Shock
Banking,Digital Asset,European Central Bank#ECB #Advances #Digital #Euro #Plans #Targets #Pilot #Launch1771500458
