TLDR
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Digital Euro clears key EU committee vote with 43 lawmakers backing it
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EU lawmakers set privacy rules for online and offline Digital Euro use
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Europe targets lower reliance on Visa and Mastercard payment networks
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ECB plans technical standards in 2026 and pilot testing from 2027
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Final Digital Euro talks with EU member states may begin after July vote
Europe moved closer to a sovereign retail payment system after lawmakers advanced the Digital Euro framework. The committee vote strengthened plans to reduce reliance on foreign-controlled card networks. It also opened the next stage of negotiations over privacy, access, costs, and financial stability.
Lawmakers Set Core Rules for the Digital Euro
The European Parliament’s economic committee approved its position by 43 votes to 14 on Tuesday. The proposal defines how the Digital Euro would operate across the eurozone. It also sets distribution rules for banks, payment firms, regulated crypto companies, and post offices.
Consumers could use the currency through online accounts or offline wallets stored on personal devices. Offline balances would function like cash because lost devices could permanently remove access to stored funds. Meanwhile, online payments would use account-based systems managed through approved service providers.
The proposal requires strong privacy tools, including systems based on zero-knowledge proofs. These tools would verify payments without exposing unnecessary personal details to the ECB. As a result, the central bank would operate the infrastructure without directly identifying individual users.
Europe Targets US Payment Dependence
European officials view the Digital Euro as part of a wider push for financial independence. Visa and Mastercard handle 61% of euro-area card payments and nearly all cross-border card transactions. Therefore, lawmakers want a public option that keeps more payment infrastructure under European control.
The planned currency would complement cash and commercial banking services rather than replace them. Consumers would hold Digital Euro funds in dedicated wallets, although authorities would impose limits on individual balances. The European Commission would set those limits after consulting the ECB and would review them regularly.
The framework bars interest payments on balances to limit competition with bank deposits. Businesses could hold incoming funds temporarily, generally for no longer than 24 hours. Most merchants would accept payments, although some small firms and self-employed workers would receive exemptions.
ECB Prepares for Possible 2029 Launch
The ECB must complete technical standards, testing, and provider coordination before any Digital Euro launch. Officials expect technical rules during 2026 and pilot programs from 2027. The bank wants full technical readiness for possible issuance by 2029.
The proposal requires at least two years for implementation after lawmakers approve the final legislation. Basic account access and payments would remain free, while providers could charge regulated fees for extra services. Offline payments would carry no fees under the committee’s position.
Parliament expects a Strasbourg plenary vote in early July, followed by talks with all 27 member states. Lawmakers aim to complete the final Digital Euro agreement before the end of 2026. Meanwhile, dollar-backed stablecoins continue expanding, which adds pressure to Europe’s payment autonomy plans.
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