- China plans to pay interest on digital yuan through commercial banks
- Digital yuan shifts from cash-like tool to deposit-style currency
- Cross-border pilots signal broader ambitions for China’s central bank digital currency
China is reshaping its digital yuan strategy as the central bank outlines a major policy adjustment, according to official commentary. The People’s Bank of China is preparing to reposition the e-CNY within the formal banking system rather than treating it as cash.
According to Lu Lei, a deputy governor of the central bank, the digital yuan will transition into a digital deposit currency. That change reflects outcomes from more than a decade of pilots and regulatory testing across the country.
Banks move closer to deposit-style digital yuan model
Under the updated framework, commercial banks will begin paying interest on verified digital yuan wallets. Those interest rates will follow existing self-regulatory agreements that already govern deposit pricing.
Consequently, digital yuan balances will receive deposit insurance protection similar to traditional bank accounts. This alignment aims to reduce perceived risks and improve trust among retail and institutional users. Despite extensive trials, the digital yuan has struggled to compete with WeChat Pay and Alipay.
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However, the interest-bearing structure gives users a clearer financial incentive to hold e-CNY balances. Banks will also gain flexibility to manage digital yuan holdings within their asset and liability operations.
Additionally, non-bank payment institutions will treat digital yuan reserves like customer funds with a 100 percent ratio. According to Lu, these measures lower operational friction while improving balance sheet integration.
Official data shows that by late November 2025, China recorded 3.48 billion e-CNY transactions. The total transaction value reached ¥16.7 trillion, or $2.38 trillion, highlighting the project’s scale.
Cross-border expansion supports broader digital yuan ambitions
Beyond domestic reforms, China has accelerated efforts to promote the digital yuan internationally. According to recent disclosures, the central bank plans a cross-border pilot involving Singapore. Moreover, authorities are encouraging digital yuan usage in Thailand, Hong Kong, the United Arab Emirates, and Saudi Arabia.
These initiatives support China’s broader objective of expanding the yuan’s role in global settlements. In September, the launch of the e-CNY International Operation Center in Shanghai reinforced that direction.
Meanwhile, regulators continue to separate state-backed digital currency policy from private crypto activity. Blockchain development remains supported, while cryptocurrency trading and mining remain banned on the mainland.
The interest-bearing shift reflects a practical adjustment rather than a change in regulatory philosophy. According to Lu, policymakers now view deposit-style incentives as essential for sustainable adoption. The revised framework signals a push to normalize the digital yuan within everyday banking activity.
By aligning the e-CNY with familiar financial structures, authorities are strengthening their role in China’s evolving payment landscape.
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