The European Central Bank (ECB) just threw open the doors for industry professionals to jump in and help shape how the digital euro will actually work day-to-day.
They’re calling on experts to join key workstreams tackling everything from ATMs and payment terminals to the full acceptance setup across Europe.
In a new announcement this week, the ECB launched applications for two targeted workstreams under its Rulebook Development Group (RDG). One dives straight into practical implementation specs for ATM and terminal providers. The focus is on certification and approval processes to make sure payment solutions fit smoothly into the digital euro ecosystem.
The digital euro is expected to bridge gaps by fitting into Europe’s existing payment standards.
Breaking Down the Workstreams for the digital euro
Accordingly, a dedicated team will craft detailed implementation guidelines specifically for ATMs and payment terminals. They’re looking at communication tech options, offline capabilities, and ways to reuse current payment standards so upgrades don’t mean starting from scratch.
The second workstream is building out solid proposals for testing, certification, and approvals to ensure every payment solution and piece of infrastructure used by payment service providers fit within the digital euro world.
These groups will feed their technical insights directly into the RDG, which brings together voices from merchants, payment providers, consumers, and more.
A clear, standardized rulebook to make the digital euro reliable and user-friendly everywhere seems to be the goal.
Digital euro Pilot on the Horizon for 2027
The ECB has already mapped out next steps, planning to start picking EU-licensed payment service providers soon. That sets the stage for a 12-month digital euro pilot kicking off in the second half of 2027.
ECB Executive Board Member Piero Cipollone shared that this trial run will bring in a select group of merchants, Eurosystem staff, and PSPs to test things in a real but controlled way.
Of course, the ECB stresses that no final green light to issue the digital euro comes until the necessary EU legislation is fully in place.