ECB Unveils Results From Digital Euro Trials, Plans Second Testing Round

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The European Central Bank’s digital euro trials revealed some breakthroughs in payment innovation, with broad support fueling ambitious 2026 plans to expand access, efficiency, and inclusion.

ECB Pushes Forward With Next Phase of Digital Euro Testing

The European Central Bank (ECB) has unveiled the results of its digital euro innovation platform and outlined plans for the initiative’s next phase. In an announcement on Sept. 26, the bank reported that the first round of testing—which involved nearly 70 participants from banking, fintech, academia, and retail sectors—revealed strong potential for the digital euro to drive payment innovation and expand financial inclusion. Building on these findings, the ECB confirmed it will launch a second round of experimentation in 2026.

The ECB stated:

Following the success of these partnerships and amid further demand from market participants, the ECB has decided to launch a second round of experimentation in order to maximise the digital euro’s potential for innovation.

“More details will be announced during the first half of 2026,” the ECB added. At a payments conference in Milan, Executive Board member Piero Cipollone detailed: “We asked market participants to imagine the many opportunities a digital euro could offer consumers and merchants. Their enthusiastic response shows the immense scope for the digital euro to play a transformative role in the European payments landscape.”

Trials highlighted innovations such as conditional payments, which allow funds to be released only after specific conditions are met, as well as integrated electronic receipts to streamline record-keeping and reduce environmental costs.

The ECB explained:

The digital euro’s extensive reach would ensure that these innovative ideas are instantly accessible to all consumers and merchants in the euro area, addressing the limitations typically associated with the closed ecosystems of other payment methods.

Beyond new applications, the ECB emphasized the importance of harmonized standards and infrastructure to ensure scalability and usability. While skeptics warn about risks such as reduced privacy or potential competition with private payment services, proponents contend that the digital euro would create open access, enhance resilience, and strengthen protections for European consumers.

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