European Central Bank officials this week set a clear target: the launch of the digital euro in 2029. That target was described as realistic by high figures from the ECB, even as the bank said it will continue preparatory work after the formal end of the current phase in October 2025. According to Bloomberg and ECB statements, the timetable depends on new EU laws and technical preparedness.
The preparation phase will continue after October 2025
Based on reports, the ECB started the preparation phase in November 2023 and has been building rules and testing capabilities since then. The formal part of that phase would end in October 2025, but officials said the work won’t stop.
Tasks still on the list include finalizing the rulebook, deciding how privacy and anti-money laundering controls will work, and lining up service providers and technical infrastructure. A final decision to issue will only be taken once the legal framework is in place.
What the 2029 target means for markets and banks
Reports have revealed that the bank is aiming for a mid-2029 launch if everything lines up: legislation, systems and user tools. That leaves four years for lawmakers and market players to take action.
Banks will be watching closely. This also applies to fintech companies and payment platforms. Some regulators have said they want central bank money to become available electronically so that citizens can continue to safely use public money as cash use declines.
Political pressure and international context
According to media reports, political signals from outside the EU accelerated the talks. US President Donald Trump’s moves on crypto and stablecoin regulation were cited by some EU ministers as a reason to strengthen Europe’s own plan.
The ECB says the digital euro is partly about keeping public money relevant as private payment options expand. Every retail publishing and distribution decision CBDC will still need approval from EU lawmakers before the bank can start a widespread rollout.
Open questions around design and boundaries remain. Will retail accounts earn interest? How much can a person store in digital euros? Can citizens use the currency offline? These are fundamental questions that lawmakers and the ECB must answer together.
Reports say the ECB aims to protect privacy while complying with AML rules, but those goals sometimes conflict and will require compromises.
A narrow window, but no guarantee. The 2029 timeline is a signal for markets and developers. It’s a goal, not a promise. Based on reports, the bank’s path will be determined by how quickly EU legislation evolves and how well technical testing will go in the coming months and years.
Featured image from Getty Images, chart from TradingView