Close Menu
Digital Euro News
    What's Hot

    Eurosystem to Invite Payment Service Providers to Join 2027 Digital Euro Pilot

    November 29, 2025

    ECB Study Warns Digital Euro Could Shift Bank Funding and Urges New Stability Scenarios

    November 28, 2025

    Glassnode Finds Sharp Negative Correlation Between Bitcoin Price and USDT Exchange Flows

    November 28, 2025
    X (Twitter)
    Digital Euro News
    Digital Euro News
    Home»Digital Euro»Austrian Study Reveals Security and Cost Savings as Top Drivers of Digital Euro Adoption
    Digital Euro

    Austrian Study Reveals Security and Cost Savings as Top Drivers of Digital Euro Adoption

    BIS working paper finds 45% of Austrian consumers would adopt a realistically designed digital euro, with security fears outweighing privacy concerns.
    By Oliver TorsneyNovember 13, 2025Updated:November 22, 20253 Mins Read
    A stylized euro wallet device placed on euro banknotes, representing digital euro adoption trends.
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Telegram WhatsApp Copy Link

    A new working paper published by the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) finds that consumer demand for the digital euro may be stronger than previously expected. The study, conducted in Austria and released in November 2025, suggests that around 45% of consumers would adopt a realistically designed digital euro, according to researchers Helmut Elsinger, Helmut Stix and Martin Summer.

    The study Consumer preferences for a digital euro: insights from a discrete choice experiment in Austria is the first discrete choice experiment in Europe to quantify consumer trade offs for specific digital euro features. It reflects ongoing policy debates at the European Central Bank (ECB) and the European Commission regarding privacy, security, offline payments, and cost structures.

    Security outweighs privacy concerns

    The strongest driver of digital euro adoption is security, particularly protection against financial loss. Moving from full liability (as with losing a physical wallet) to a capped loss of €250 increased adoption likelihood by 12 percentage points. Full protection raised it by 23 points.

    By contrast, privacy-despite being central in public debate – had only a small marginal impact on average. The authors report that consumers showed “near indifference” between the two privacy models tested unless monetary incentives were introduced. Privacy-sensitive respondents (around one-third of the sample) reacted differently and were less willing to compromise.

    Cost incentives also play a significant role

    Monetary incentives-such as €5 or €10 monthly savings-significantly increased the probability of adoption, suggesting that tangible financial benefits could influence uptake. A €10 savings incentive increased adoption by about eight percentage points.

    Offline use and form factor matter less

    Offline functionality boosted adoption by only four percentage points, suggesting limited demand for this feature despite its importance for financial inclusion. Respondents also leaned slightly toward a card-based digital euro over an app, reflecting Austria’s strong card-payment habits.

    Who is most likely to adopt?

    Younger, educated, and financially risk-tolerant individuals showed a significantly higher intention to adopt the digital euro. Trust in the central bank emerged as a key factor: consumers with high ECB trust were 15 percentage points more likely to choose a digital euro.

    Interestingly, cash users were not uniformly resistant. While many showed low adoption likelihood, a notable subgroup – young, tech-savvy and dissatisfied with cash acceptance – showed high interest.

    What this means for EU policymakers

    The BIS study provides one of the clearest empirical signals yet that a digital euro could gain early traction if designed with strong security guarantees and meaningful cost advantages. It also suggests that privacy, although politically sensitive, may not be the decisive adoption barrier it is often portrayed to be-except for a minority of strongly privacy-oriented citizens.

    As the ECB continues its preparation phase and the European Commission refines its legislative package, these findings give policymakers a clearer view of which features could maximize citizen uptake.

    Featured
    Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Telegram WhatsApp Copy Link

    Related Posts

    Eurosystem to Invite Payment Service Providers to Join 2027 Digital Euro Pilot

    November 29, 2025

    ECB Study Warns Digital Euro Could Shift Bank Funding and Urges New Stability Scenarios

    November 28, 2025

    ECB Seminar Highlights Strong Public Demand for Safer, More Accessible Digital Euro

    November 27, 2025

    Why AI Will Define the Digital Euro’s Future

    November 26, 2025
    Important Posts

    Why the ECB Should Reconsider Launching the Digital Euro

    November 24, 2025

    Why the European Central Bank Must Launch the Digital Euro

    November 24, 2025

    ECB Adviser Casts Doubt on Fully Offline Version of Digital Euro

    November 12, 2025

    DigitalEuroNews.com is an independent news and information platform. It is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to the European Central Bank, the European Union, or any other governmental or financial authority. DigitalEuroNews.com is also not associated with Euronews.com. All content, articles, and opinions published on this website are provided for informational purposes only and do not constitute financial, legal, or professional advice.

    X (Twitter)

    Eurosystem to Invite Payment Service Providers to Join 2027 Digital Euro Pilot

    November 29, 2025

    ECB Study Warns Digital Euro Could Shift Bank Funding and Urges New Stability Scenarios

    November 28, 2025

    Glassnode Finds Sharp Negative Correlation Between Bitcoin Price and USDT Exchange Flows

    November 28, 2025

    South Africa’s Central Bank Says There Is No Strong Immediate Need for a Retail CBDC

    November 28, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest Digital Euro and fintech updates.

    © 2025 DigitalEuroNews.com | Home | Contact Us

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.