Europe’s crypto policy is being misread if it is reduced to a simple contest between a digital euro and dollar stablecoins. The stronger signal is that the ECB, the European Commission, and industry groups are trying to rebuild post-trade plumbing at the same time: settlement in central bank money, legal finality for DLT systems, and a regulated place for euro stablecoins inside that market structure.
Pontes and Appia show the ECB is working on infrastructure, not a narrative trade
The European Central Bank has committed to a dual-track DLT settlement plan with two distinct jobs. Pontes is the nearer-term pilot, scheduled for 2026, and is designed to connect DLT platforms to TARGET Services so tokenized transactions can settle in central bank money without abandoning the existing core settlement stack.
Appia is the longer track. It is aimed at building a broader ecosystem for integrated financial markets, including wholesale and cross-border use cases, which matters because DLT settlement only becomes commercially meaningful if it can interoperate with the systems banks, custodians, and securities infrastructures already use.
That distinction is important for crypto markets. A regulated euro stablecoin strategy has a better chance of sticking when it sits alongside a central-bank-backed settlement path rather than trying to replace it, and that makes the EU effort look more like layered market redesign than a one-product bet.
The first pilot failed the scale test, and Brussels is now trying to fix that
The EU’s original DLT Pilot Regime, launched in 2022, attracted limited use because the design gave firms little reason to commit serious volume. The regime’s low cap, reported in the earlier framework at around €6 billion, uncertainty over how long the framework would last, and restrictive cash-settlement rules made it hard for infrastructures and issuers to build durable business cases.
The Market Integration Package is the answer now on the table. It would widen the DLT regime substantially, including an expanded threshold up to €100 billion, revise parts of the Central Securities Depositories framework to better accommodate DLT-based services, and move toward a single EU supervisor in ESMA for crypto-asset service providers instead of a more fragmented national model.
These are not cosmetic changes. If the pilot remains capped too tightly, if participants still do not know whether permissions will persist, or if settlement cash options remain too narrow, tokenized securities stay trapped in a demonstration phase and euro stablecoins remain peripheral rather than functional.
Settlement finality is the legal checkpoint that decides whether DLT can move from pilots to production
The most technical part of the reform package may also be the most important for market adoption: the proposed Settlement Finality Regulation for DLT systems. Traditional market infrastructure works because participants know exactly when a transfer is legally final and cannot be unwound; distributed systems complicate that because consensus can be probabilistic, delayed, or operationally dependent on network design.
Without a clear, enforceable finality point, large institutions will limit exposure no matter how efficient tokenization looks on paper. The next concrete checkpoint is therefore not just the political progress of the European Commission’s Market Integration Package, but also the detailed regulatory technical standards that will define how finality is recognized in DLT-based settlement systems.
| Area | Current problem | Proposed fix or direction | Why markets should care |
|---|---|---|---|
| DLT Pilot Regime scale | Low volume limits and weak commercial incentives | Market Integration Package would expand thresholds, with discussion up to €100 billion | Larger capacity is needed before banks and infrastructures commit meaningful flow |
| Regulatory supervision | Fragmented national oversight for crypto firms | Single EU regulator role for CASPs through ESMA | Reduces compliance fragmentation and may improve cross-border operating certainty |
| Cash settlement | Restrictive rules limit practical use of tokenized securities settlement | Push for broader use of central bank money and licensed euro stablecoins | A usable cash leg is necessary for real post-trade activity, not just issuance experiments |
| Legal finality | DLT consensus does not map neatly to existing finality rules | Settlement Finality Regulation and technical standards for deterministic finality | Institutions will not scale exposure until finality is legally clear |
Euro stablecoins are being positioned as one settlement option, not the whole system
EFAMA has been explicit that Europe should not design a single-rail future. Its preferred model is a multipolar settlement ecosystem that includes wholesale CBDC, tokenized deposits, commercial bank money tokens, and MiCA-compliant stablecoins, which is a practical market-structure argument rather than an ideological one.
That matters because euro stablecoins become more credible when they are treated as one regulated funding and settlement tool among several. Under that approach, MiCA-compliant issuers can support parts of the transaction chain where central bank access is not available or not operationally efficient, while the ECB keeps central bank money at the core for higher-assurance settlement functions.
The caution is that regulation can still split the market. Coordination between MiCA in the EU and US stablecoin legislation such as the GENIUS Act remains unresolved, and if issuance, reserve, redemption, or distribution rules diverge too far, firms may face a cross-border market where liquidity pools fragment instead of deepening.
Practical checks for investors, issuers, and infrastructure firms
If you are evaluating the EU tokenization story, the right question is not whether Brussels likes blockchain. It is whether the legal and operational barriers that blocked the 2022 regime are actually being removed in a way that supports issuance, settlement, custody, and secondary-market liquidity at institutional scale.
That means tracking three specific checkpoints: legislative progress on the European Commission’s Market Integration Package, the eventual technical standards for DLT settlement finality, and whether cash settlement rules are widened enough to include licensed euro stablecoins in usable workflows. Questions around custody for self-hosted wallets and securities registration under existing CSDR constraints also remain relevant because they affect who can participate and under what control model.
For crypto markets, the distinction is straightforward. A headline about euro stablecoins is still mostly narrative unless it comes with clearer finality rules, broader settlement options, and enough regulatory certainty for banks and market infrastructures to route real volume through the system.
Short Q&A
Is Pontes the same thing as a digital euro launch?
No. Pontes is a 2026 pilot for linking DLT platforms to TARGET Services for settlement in central bank money, not a retail digital euro rollout.
Why does the expanded €100 billion threshold matter?
Because the earlier pilot’s low caps made it hard to justify real business investment. Higher thresholds are a basic condition for production-scale use.
Are euro stablecoins replacing bank money or wholesale CBDC in Europe’s plan?
No. The current direction, supported by EFAMA, is a mixed settlement system where stablecoins sit alongside wholesale CBDC, tokenized deposits, and commercial bank money tokens.
What is the next hard signal to watch?
Progress on the Market Integration Package and the detailed standards that define legally final settlement for DLT transactions.

