Taiwan CBDC Report Puts Retail on Hold
Taiwan’s central bank has made its clearest public statement yet on where its CBDC work is heading: there is no urgent need to launch a retail digital currency for everyday payments, but wholesale CBDC remains a live priority as tokenized assets move closer to real market infrastructure. In a new press release and communication summary report published on April 15, the bank said it is continuing both research and trials while using a wider public consultation process to shape the next phase.
That is the strongest news angle in the report. Taiwan is not shelving CBDC altogether. It is effectively splitting the story in two: retail CBDC stays on the research track because the country already has convenient, low-cost digital payment options, while wholesale CBDC is being pushed forward as a settlement tool for tokenized money and tokenized assets.
Retail digital cash is still a public option, not a near-term launch
The central bank says Taiwan’s payment system is already diverse and efficient, which is why there is no pressing case to issue a retail CBDC right now. Even so, it argues there is still value in preserving a public payment option, improving interoperability across payment tools, and keeping a public digital rail available if market structure changes in the future.
That position is important because it is more cautious than many CBDC headlines suggest. Taiwan is not pitching retail CBDC as an urgent answer to a broken payments market. It is treating it as strategic public infrastructure that may become useful later, especially for government-to-citizen payments, digital voucher distribution and gaps left by private payment providers.
The report also says the bank has already built a retail CBDC prototype platform with functions including transfers, purchases and digital voucher payments, then used that architecture as the basis for a broader digital public cashflow platform. That platform is already supporting government distribution programs, which lets the bank test capacity and operational design without committing to a full retail CBDC launch.
The real momentum is on the wholesale side
If retail CBDC is on hold, wholesale CBDC is not. The report says Taiwan has already built a tokenized cashflow trial platform and is now testing whether wholesale CBDC can support delivery-versus-payment settlement for tokenized assets, including corporate bond token trials conducted with the Taiwan Depository and Clearing Corporation.
That makes this much more than an academic exercise. The central bank is openly positioning wholesale CBDC as the settlement leg for a future tokenized financial system, where tokenized deposits, tokenized bonds and other real-world assets need a trusted final settlement asset to move across institutions and platforms.
In the bank’s own framing, wholesale CBDC is tokenized central bank reserves. That matters because it puts Taiwan close to the same policy direction now visible in Europe and other major markets: tokenized private money may circulate, but central bank money is still seen as the best final settlement tool when tokenized markets scale.
Stablecoins are acknowledged, but not treated as the endgame
One of the most useful parts of the report is its side-by-side comparison of CBDC, stablecoins and tokenized deposits. The bank says stablecoins are usually issued by non-bank entities, are increasingly used beyond crypto trading, and carry risks tied to issuer credit, reserve transparency and value stability. By contrast, tokenized deposits are described as bank liabilities operating inside a more heavily supervised banking framework, while CBDC is presented as direct central bank money without credit or liquidity risk.
That comparison reads like a quiet but important policy signal. Taiwan is not denying that stablecoins and tokenized deposits can exist alongside CBDC. In fact, the report says they can coexist and complement one another. But it still argues that wholesale CBDC should serve as the final settlement bridge across institutions, platforms and tokenized money systems, especially if the market wants to avoid fragmentation.
Privacy, legal structure and wallet limits are still unresolved in practice
The report also makes clear that retail CBDC, if it ever launches, would come with tight safeguards. The bank says a future retail system would likely be non-interest-bearing at first, use wallet balance limits and wallet-number caps, and rely on intermediaries such as banks or e-payment institutions to handle KYC and AML duties. It also says a dedicated CBDC law may be preferable to simply amending the central bank act.
On privacy, the bank says user data would sit with intermediaries rather than with the central bank, while transaction data on the platform would be de-identified. It also says the central bank would not conduct routine monitoring of user transactions, with information access limited to abnormal transaction cases or lawful requests from authorities.
That is significant because it shows Taiwan’s CBDC work is no longer only about technical feasibility. It is now very much about legal design, privacy governance and how to stop a retail CBDC from draining deposits out of the banking system. Those are exactly the issues that tend to decide whether a CBDC remains a pilot or becomes policy.
A long consultation process gives the report more weight
The central bank’s press release says the summary report is based on a broad communication effort that started in 2023, including a nationwide survey and nine public hearings, forums and briefing sessions held across northern, central and southern Taiwan in 2025. The bank says those events drew 1,714 participants from 219 institutions, including financial firms, e-payment companies, virtual asset businesses, civil groups, government bodies and academia.
That gives the report more credibility than a narrow internal policy memo. Taiwan is trying to show that its CBDC framework is being shaped not only by internal central bank research, but also by stakeholder input across finance, payments, digital assets and the public sector.
Why it matters for crypto
Taiwan’s report is one of the clearer examples of a central bank separating the retail CBDC story from the tokenized markets story. Retail digital cash is being treated as optional public infrastructure for the future, while wholesale CBDC is being treated as something much closer to real market plumbing for tokenized assets.
It also matters because the bank is not pretending stablecoins will disappear. It is explicitly comparing them with tokenized deposits and CBDC, and then placing wholesale CBDC above them as the preferred final settlement asset. That is a policy signal crypto markets should take seriously, especially as more jurisdictions start deciding how tokenized finance will actually settle.
And for the broader digital asset industry, the report is another reminder that central banks may be far more willing to back tokenized capital markets than to rush into mass-market retail CBDCs. That split could end up shaping the next phase of tokenization more than many crypto-native firms expect. This last point is an analytical inference based on the bank’s stated priorities.
What to watch next
Watch Taiwan’s wholesale CBDC work first, not the retail side. The most concrete forward path in the report is continued testing with tokenized assets and settlement infrastructure, especially in cooperation with TDCC and other market institutions.
Also watch whether Taiwan moves toward a draft CBDC-specific law, because the report strongly suggests the current legal basis is not yet sufficient for issuance. If that legislative work does not advance, retail CBDC is likely to remain a research platform rather than a policy launch candidate.
And finally, watch how the bank’s position on stablecoins evolves. The report acknowledges their growing role, but still treats them as riskier than tokenized deposits and clearly below wholesale CBDC in the settlement hierarchy. If Taiwan’s virtual asset rules mature further, that balance could become a much bigger regulatory question.