The European Central Bank’s digital euro project is entering its most politically sensitive phase, with a decisive vote in the European Parliament expected in the first half of 2026. While EU governments have largely backed the initiative, parliamentary support remains uncertain, turning the coming months into a critical test for Europe’s first attempt at public digital money.
The project cleared a key institutional hurdle in late December, when the Council of the European Union agreed its negotiating position on legislation that would allow the ECB to issue a digital version of cash. The proposed digital euro would function alongside physical banknotes and coins, enabling payments in shops, online, and between individuals, even in some offline scenarios.
For the ECB and supportive member states, the digital euro is increasingly framed as a strategic response to Europe’s heavy reliance on non-European payment providers. Central bankers argue that without a public digital alternative, retail payments risk becoming more dependent on US-based card schemes and big tech wallets, with implications for resilience and monetary sovereignty.
The harder battle now lies in the European Parliament. The 720-seat chamber is divided, with concerns ranging from privacy and state overreach to the potential impact on commercial banks. Several political groups have called for stricter limits on holdings, stronger guarantees for cash, or a narrower scope for the project. Parliamentary arithmetic suggests that the outcome is far from guaranteed, and officials following the process privately warn the vote could be extremely close.
Against this backdrop, the ECB has stepped up its outreach to lawmakers, consumer groups and the financial sector. Recent user studies, technical papers and public speeches have sought to reassure sceptics that the digital euro would be privacy-respecting, non-programmable and capped, designed primarily as a means of payment rather than a savings instrument.
If Parliament approves the legislation in 2026, the ECB could move toward pilot phases later in the decade, with a potential launch around 2029. A rejection or heavy amendment, however, would force a rethink of Europe’s digital money strategy at a time when other jurisdictions are moving ahead.
