A Tale of Two CBDCs: The Digital Euro and the Digital Pound

Both the European Central Bank (ECB) and the Bank of England are racing – at very different speeds and with very different urgency – to build a digital form of central bank money. The journeys reveal not just two technical projects, but two distinct philosophies about sovereignty, public money, and the future of the payment system. 

When Christine Lagarde appeared before the European Parliament in February 2026 and described the digital euro as essential to Europe’s monetary sovereignty, she was making an argument that goes well beyond payments technology. Across the Channel, the Bank of England was still asking a more fundamental question: does Britain need a digital pound at all? 

That gap in posture defines everything. The digital euro and the digital pound are both central bank digital currencies – CBDCs – designed to put a direct claim on public money into citizens’ digital wallets. But their timelines, drivers, and designs reflect two economies in very different geopolitical and institutional contexts. 

What they are – and what they are not 

Both projects share a common architecture. A CBDC is a digital liability of the central bank itself – distinct from the money held in commercial bank accounts, which is a liability of the private bank. In that sense, a digital pound or digital euro would sit alongside banknotes in the hierarchy of money: safe, guaranteed, and issued by a public authority. 

Neither project proposes replacing cash. Both are explicit that digital and physical forms of central bank money will coexist. And crucially, neither is a cryptocurrency: there is no blockchain, no decentralised ledger, and no speculative dimension. These are government-issued, government-guaranteed instruments, distributed through the existing banking system. 

The political and strategic context 

The urgency of the digital euro is inseparable from geopolitics. Nearly two-thirds of card transactions in the Eurozone are processed by non-European schemes – primarily Visa and Mastercard – leaving the bloc’s payments infrastructure critically dependent on foreign networks. The rise of US dollar-backed stablecoins, actively encouraged by the Trump administration from 2025 onwards, added further impetus: Lagarde and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen co-authored an op-ed in January 2025 warning that without a digital euro, the euro’s role in digital commerce could be gradually hollowed out. 

For the UK, the strategic framing is more muted. Britain left the EU’s financial architecture and is charting its own course on payments, guided by HM Treasury’s National Payments Vision. The digital pound is framed primarily as an innovation play – a potential platform for fintech development – and as a safeguard against longer-term risks to monetary singleness, the principle that all forms of money should be exchangeable one-for-one at all times. The existential urgency present in ECB communications is largely absent from the Bank of England’s. 

 “The Eurozone sees the digital euro as a shield for monetary sovereignty. The UK sees the digital pound as a question still worth asking.” 

Design: how they would actually work 

Both currencies use a two-tier distribution model: the central bank issues the digital currency, while citizens access it through wallets offered by commercial banks and payment providers. Neither the ECB nor the Bank of England would hold individual accounts or see personal transaction data. Privacy has been a consistent concern in both projects, and both institutions have committed to strong data protections – though the specific legislative frameworks differ. 

The digital euro is designed with a holding limit – a cap on how much any individual can hold – to prevent large-scale outflows from commercial bank deposits, which could destabilise the banking system. The Council of the EU’s December 2025 position introduced an important governance nuance: rather than fixing a single figure in legislation, the co-legislators (Council and European Parliament) would set a maximum ceiling of, for example, €3,000 for individuals, within which the ECB would be responsible for setting and adjusting the actual limit over time. This preserves democratic oversight while giving the ECB the operational flexibility to respond to changing conditions. The proposed range for the digital pound’s holding limit is between £10,000 and £20,000. 

One meaningful design divergence concerns offline functionality. The digital euro’s rulebook includes offline payment capability – a transaction that works without an internet connection, much like cash – addressing financial inclusion and resilience concerns. This was a contentious point during negotiations: the Parliament’s rapporteur, EPP’s Fernando Navarrete, had pushed for a fully separate offline digital euro solution, independent of the ECB’s central infrastructure. However, following a behind-closed-doors meeting in March 2026 in which Commission and ECB officials told Navarrete that his proposal was technically unfeasible, lawmakers struck a political deal on 24 March 2026 to proceed as a single, unified project. The Council supports both online and offline functionality within that single architecture. The digital pound is still exploring whether offline payments belong in the core offering or as an optional overlay. The Bank of England has noted that offline capability creates additional risks – particularly around double-spending and fraud – that require careful mitigation. 

Another notable difference is merchant acceptance. The digital euro, under the European Commission’s proposal, would be mandatory for merchants to accept – mirroring the status of cash. The Bank of England has taken a notably different stance: there are currently no plans to require UK merchants to accept a digital pound. 

The legislative gap – and why it matters 

Perhaps the starkest difference between the two projects is legislative maturity. The European Commission drafted its digital euro regulation in 2023, and by early 2026 it was close to finalisation: the Council had agreed its position in December 2025, and on 24 March 2026 lawmakers reached a political deal to advance the project as a single unified currency – ending months of internal Parliament negotiations. The European Parliament is now aiming to vote on its position in May 2026, after which formal trilogue negotiations between the Council and Parliament can begin. If a deal between the two institutions is reached in 2027, the ECB could issue the digital euro by 2029. That legislative momentum has a practical consequence: it sets the clock. 

The UK has no equivalent legislation in preparation. As UK Finance observed in January 2026, unlike the EU, Britain has yet to lay out a specific legal framework for a digital pound. Before any build phase could begin, the UK Parliament would need to pass primary legislation covering consumer protections, data privacy, operational liability, and governance. That process – consultation, drafting, scrutiny, passage – could take years, even after a positive build decision in late 2026. 

This is not merely a procedural difference. Legislation defines the rules of the road for the entire ecosystem – for banks building wallets, for merchants considering acceptance, and for citizens deciding whether to trust and use the currency. The digital euro’s legislative framework has enabled the ECB to select infrastructure providers and invite payment service providers (PSPs) to a pilot programme. The digital pound cannot reach that point until the UK Parliament acts. 

The commercial question – and a private sector challenge 

The two-tier distribution model sits at the heart of the commercial case for both projects. Under this architecture, the central bank issues the currency but private firms hold the customer relationship -and with it, real revenue opportunity. Banks and PSPs would act as supervised intermediaries: building and distributing digital wallets, providing identity verification and authentication services, and layering fee-based products on top of the core infrastructure. In practice, this could mean digital euro or digital pound wallets integrated directly into existing banking apps, embedded authentication services, and premium payment products built on the public rails. For firms that engage early and define their role in the ecosystem, the distribution model is a platform, not merely a compliance obligation.  

Commercial banks on both sides of the Channel are watching both projects with a degree of anxiety. A PwC analysis circulated in mid-2025 estimated that Eurozone banks could face implementation costs of between €18 billion and €30 billion in the early years of the digital euro alone, before any effects on deposit bases are taken into account. UK Finance has been emphatic that holding limits must be carefully calibrated to avoid destabilising balance sheets in stress conditions. The core concern is deposit migration: if citizens move savings from bank accounts into CBDC wallets –particularly in a financial crisis, when the appeal of guaranteed central bank money would be acute – banks could face funding shortfalls, forcing them to shrink lending or raise borrowing costs. 

Both central banks have taken these concerns seriously, and holding limits are a direct response to them. But the underlying tension remains: a CBDC that is too restrictive in what users can hold provides little public benefit, while one that is set too generously could create systemic risk. 

That tension has given rise to a more fundamental challenge to the digital euro’s rationale in the European Parliament. The file’s rapporteur, Navarrete (EPP, Spain), proposed that the online digital euro should only proceed if the private sector fails to deliver a pan-European payments solution first – effectively proposing a market test before the ECB gets the green light. The argument was straightforward: if European banks and payment firms can build a seamless cross-border payments network on their own, there may be no need for a public alternative. 

There is a credible private-sector bid in play. In February 2026, Bancomat, Bizum, European Payments Initiative (EPI), SIBS and Vipps MobilePay signed a Memorandum of Understanding targeting seamless cross-border payments across 13 European markets – covering roughly 72% of the EU’s population – by 2027. Together, the participating schemes already serve around 130 million users, built on existing trusted infrastructure and explicitly framed as a sovereign European alternative to Visa and Mastercard. Proponents of the digital euro counter that only a public infrastructure can guarantee the cross-border payment rail that the Eurozone requires – one that is open, interoperable, and not subject to the commercial interests of any single group of banks. The debate is live, and its outcome will shape the digital euro’s final scope and design. 

For now, the Parliament has moved on: following the March 2026 political deal to proceed as a single unified project, the vote on Parliament’s position is now expected in May 2026. But the public-versus-private tension is unlikely to disappear from the legislative negotiations that follow. 

The public reception – and the adoption problem 

Neither project can escape a fundamental challenge that has tripped up every CBDC launch to date. The Bahamas, Nigeria, and Jamaica have introduced retail CBDCs in recent years, but adoption has been very low in all three. Ipsos research published for the ECB in October 2025 found that European consumers expect the digital euro to be safe, reliable, easy to use, and free. Meeting all four conditions simultaneously is technically possible but commercially complex: the compensation model for PSPs, who would earn fees for distributing the digital euro, has been a contentious part of the legislative negotiations. 

In the UK, public consultations revealed deep scepticism – particularly around privacy and the fear of government surveillance of spending. The Bank of England’s response has been to commit to legislated privacy protections, explicitly preventing both the Bank and the government from accessing personal transaction data. The Digital Pound Lab, launched in August 2025, is part of a deliberate effort to build industry confidence and demonstrate real use cases before any decision is made. 

What comes next 

For the digital euro, 2026 is a decisive year. The European Parliament’s vote, expected this May, will determine whether the project reaches its pilot phase. If legislation passes, the ECB’s 12-month pilot, covering four real-world use cases, will begin in the second half of 2027. The ECB has stated its target clearly: ready for potential first issuance in 2029. 

For the digital pound, 2026 is a year of assessment rather than advancement. The Bank of England’s detailed blueprint, expected later this year, will be paired with a joint evaluation by the Bank and HM Treasury of whether to proceed at all. A positive decision would mark the start of a build phase – not the end of the road – with the earliest plausible issuance remaining in the latter half of the decade. 

The two projects are, in one sense, converging on the same destination: a trusted digital form of public money that works alongside cash in a world where payment habits have shifted irrevocably online. But they are travelling at different speeds, driven by different urgencies, and shaped by different political traditions. 

The Eurozone sees the digital euro as a strategic imperative – a matter of monetary sovereignty in a world where US-dollar stablecoins and non-European payment networks are becoming ever more dominant. Britain sees the digital pound as a question still worth asking carefully and is determined to give it the time it deserves. 

Both approaches have their merits. The ECB’s speed risks outpacing public trust. The Bank of England’s caution risks falling so far behind that the decision is made by default – not by Westminster, but by the market. 

What this means for industry  

For financial services firms, PSPs and fintechs operating across the UK and EU, the introduction of CBDCs is an emerging policy and regulatory reality  and an opportunity to engage before the key decisions are made. The implications span compliance, wallet infrastructure, and strategic positioning within CBDC ecosystems that are still being designed.  

In the EU, the path is becoming clear. Firms will need to assess participation in the digital euro ecosystem: whether to seek authorisation as a Payment Interface Provider, how to integrate wallet infrastructure, and what mandatory merchant acceptance means for their client base. The debate over public versus private solutions is not resolved  the EPI/EuroPA initiative means that question will remain live throughout the legislative process. Firms with a view on where that debate lands, and the ability to make that case to policymakers, will be better placed than those waiting for the outcome. 

In the UK, the design phase represents a rare opportunity to shape outcomes before key decisions are locked in – on holding limits, compensation models, and the scope of any build. Firms that wait for legislative certainty before engaging will find the most consequential choices have already been made. 

In both jurisdictions, the political economy matters as much as the technical detail. Holding limits, merchant obligations, privacy architecture, and compensation models will be settled through stakeholder engagement and legislative negotiation – precisely the kind of work that effective public affairs strategy is built for. 

Whitehouse: your partner for the digital currency era 

Whitehouse is an expert political consultancy providing public affairs advice and political analysis to organisations across the UK and EU, including leading names in the financial services sector.  

As the digital euro and digital pound move from policy discussion to legislative reality, the ability to track developments accurately, engage meaningfully with policymakers, and anticipate what comes next will be a material competitive advantage. 

Whether you’re working in the UK, EU, or both, get in touch to discuss how we can support your business. 

For enquiries, contact us at: info@whitehousecomms.com