The European Central Bank and the broader Eurosystem have published a comprehensive payments strategy that positions the digital euro as the centerpiece of a broader effort to drag central bank money into the digital age. The plan covers retail payments, wholesale tokenized settlement, and cross-border interoperability, essentially a full-stack rethink of how euros move through the financial system.
ECB President Christine Lagarde has framed the initiative as a direct response to the growing dominance of dollar-pegged stablecoins in European commerce, warning against what she calls “digital dollarization” of the continent.
Pontes, Appia, and the alphabet soup of tokenized settlement
The strategy introduces two key infrastructure projects. First is Pontes, a distributed ledger technology-based wholesale settlement solution designed to ensure interoperability between DLT platforms and the ECB’s existing TARGET Services infrastructure. It’s targeted for completion by the end of Q3 2026. Pontes is the bridge that lets tokenized financial assets settle using actual central bank money rather than private IOUs.
Second is Appia, a longer-term exploration of a European shared ledger that could eventually provide a common digital infrastructure for financial transactions across the eurozone.
Both projects build on groundwork laid in 2024, when 64 market participants contributed to exploring a dual-track approach during tokenized asset settlement trials.
The Governing Council made the decision in October 2025 to push the digital euro project forward, specifically emphasizing utilizing tokenized settlement solutions across DLT platforms.
The digital euro timeline
The project anticipates potential issuance readiness in 2029. A pilot phase could begin as early as mid-2027, though that timeline is contingent on EU legislative action expected in 2026.
The ECB insists that central bank liabilities in digital formats are meant to supplement existing financial frameworks, not replace them. The digital euro is meant to serve as what the ECB calls the “risk-free anchor” for settling tokenized assets and deposits.
What this means for investors and the broader crypto market
By explicitly positioning the digital euro as an alternative to private stablecoins, the ECB is signaling that dollar-pegged tokens could face increasing regulatory headwinds in European markets. Lagarde’s comments about avoiding overreliance on USD-pegged stablecoins frame the proliferation of dollar-denominated digital tokens in European commerce as a monetary sovereignty issue.
The ECB’s strategy positions the eurozone as the most advanced major Western economy in terms of CBDC development, given that China’s digital yuan has been in various stages of pilot testing for years and the US has effectively shelved its CBDC ambitions under the current administration.
Investors should monitor the 2026 legislative timeline closely, because without the legal framework, the technical infrastructure cannot advance to the mid-2027 pilot phase or the 2029 issuance target.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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