ECB Confirms DLT Transactions Coming in 2026 as Digital Euro Privacy Debate Heats Up

ECB Confirms DLT Transactions Coming in 2026 as Digital Euro Privacy Debate Heats Up

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ECB Confirms DLT Transactions Coming in 2026 as Digital Euro Privacy Debate Heats Up

The European Central Bank has confirmed that it will begin allowing blockchain-based transactions to settle in central bank money in 2026, as political attention increasingly shifts to the unresolved privacy questions surrounding the proposed digital euro.

In a statement released Friday, ECB executive board member Piero Cipollone said the institution is preparing to make distributed ledger technology settlements possible within its existing monetary infrastructure next year.

The public and private sector must work together to shape the future of money, says Executive Board member Piero Cipollone at @AspenInstitute. By offering pan-European money, infrastructures and standards, we support integrated, safe and innovative payments… pic.twitter.com/uWHCbXHJdX

— European Central Bank (@ecb) December 19, 2025

At the same time, he said the ECB is continuing technical work on the digital euro, a central bank digital currency that would function as a digital form of cash across the euro area.

The move marks a concrete step toward integrating blockchain-based systems into Europe’s financial plumbing.

ECB Readies Digital Euro System, Puts Decision in Lawmakers’ Hands

Under the plan, transactions executed on DLT platforms would be able to settle directly in central bank money rather than relying on private intermediaries.

The ECB has argued that this is necessary to prevent fragmentation in tokenized markets and to ensure that new digital asset ecosystems continue to rely on a risk-free public settlement asset.

Cipollone said the digital euro infrastructure would also be designed to interact with other central bank digital currencies, allowing institutions to use it for cross-border payments.

He added that safeguards such as holding limits and the absence of interest payments would be built in to prevent large-scale shifts of deposits away from commercial banks, preserving their role in credit creation and monetary transmission.

The ECB’s technical preparations are largely complete, following a two-year preparation phase that ended in October 2025.

Source: ECB

The project has now moved into a readiness phase, with the central bank selecting potential system providers and testing settlement mechanisms.

However, officials have stressed that the ECB cannot proceed without a legal framework approved by EU lawmakers.

ECB President Christine Lagarde stated this week that the central bank’s design work is finished and that responsibility now lies with political institutions.

If the legislation is adopted in 2026, pilot transactions using the digital euro could begin in mid-2027, with the ECB aiming to be ready for a first issuance in 2029.

ECB Promises Privacy, but EU Rules Complicate the Digital Euro Vision

As the timeline becomes clearer, the debate over privacy has intensified.

The ECB has consistently said it does not support a programmable digital euro that would restrict how users can spend their money.

It has also proposed an offline payment option that would allow low-value transactions to take place without being recorded on a central ledger, offering privacy protections comparable to cash.

Source: ECB

Offline balances would be stored locally on devices or smart cards, enabling device-to-device payments without third-party validation.

These assurances contrast with broader regulatory trends in the European Union.

Recent EU proposals on data retention and anti-money laundering have raised concerns among privacy advocates, particularly as new AML rules are set to ban crypto accounts that allow transaction anonymization from 2027.

Critics argue that these policies risk undermining the privacy guarantees promised for a digital euro, even if the ECB itself does not seek access to user data.

Political negotiations are now underway as the Council of the EU agreed on December 19 on its negotiating position for the digital euro’s legal framework, clearing the way for talks with the European Parliament, which is expected to finalize its stance by May 2026.

ECB officials have described discussions among member states as constructive but have acknowledged that privacy, data access, and democratic oversight remain contentious issues.

Public interest also remains uncertain. An ECB consumer survey published in March found that many Europeans see little need for a digital euro and prefer existing payment methods, including cash and bank accounts.

While the ECB has said adoption levels would not threaten financial stability, it has acknowledged that public trust and education will be critical.


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