
A Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) is a digital version of a country's fiat currency, issued directly by the nation’s central bank. Its value is equivalent to the local legal tender and can be used for everyday payments and interbank settlements. Unlike cryptocurrencies, which are subject to market volatility, a CBDC functions more like an electronic form of cash and operates on regulated payment networks.
CBDCs have the potential to transform daily payments, cross-border settlements, and regulatory integration.
For individuals, CBDCs could be used for transportation, utility bill payments, and government subsidy distribution, providing fast transaction speeds and low fees. For merchants, payments are confirmed more quickly, settlements are traceable, and reconciliation costs are reduced. For exchanges and wallet service providers, CBDCs introduce new on-ramp and off-ramp channels for fiat deposits and withdrawals, impacting compliance processes and risk management models.
CBDCs typically operate under a two-tier structure involving central bank issuance and institutional management.
The two-tier model means the central bank handles issuance ("minting") and maintains the master ledger, while commercial banks or licensed payment institutions provide wallets to the public, as well as customer service and compliance. This approach preserves central bank credibility without displacing commercial banking services.
Retail CBDCs are designed for the general public to facilitate daily transactions. Wholesale CBDCs serve banks and financial markets for large-value settlements and cross-border transactions. Both types are issued by the central bank but differ in target users and transaction scale.
Tiered wallets are a common feature. Wallets with varying levels of identity verification come with different limits and functions: basic wallets bound only to a mobile number support small transactions, while advanced wallets with stricter KYC allow for higher-value transfers and cross-border features. Identity verification (KYC) is usually required when opening or upgrading a wallet.
Some implementations support offline payments and programmable payments. Offline payments enable small transactions in low-connectivity environments via mobile devices or hardware cards. Programmable payments allow conditional transfers—such as “automatic split upon receipt” or “automatic deduction on due date”—making them ideal for payroll, tax collection, or targeted subsidies.
CBDCs are mainly involved in fiat on-ramps/off-ramps, compliance auditing, and off-chain settlement.
In exchange fiat channels: When a country integrates CBDC with its banking system, users can deposit funds through their local CBDC wallets. Funds settle instantly on the platform, enabling users to purchase assets like USDT. Since CBDCs represent domestic currency, there is no price volatility risk, and transaction confirmation is typically near-instant.
A standard process on Gate (assuming the country supports it):
Step 1: Complete identity verification and risk assessment on Gate to qualify for fiat channel access.
Step 2: Navigate to the fiat deposit page, select your country’s CBDC option, and link your official CBDC wallet or a wallet provided by your bank.
Step 3: Initiate the deposit; CBDC settles instantly within the local system. Once funds are credited, place spot orders to buy desired crypto assets.
Step 4: For withdrawals, choose to transfer funds to your CBDC wallet. Follow local withdrawal limits and monitoring rules—small withdrawals may settle instantly; larger ones could require compliance checks.
On-chain ecosystem: CBDC networks are typically permissioned and do not connect directly with public blockchains or DeFi platforms. To interact with on-chain assets, regulated custodians or banks act as “bridges,” enabling a hybrid process of off-chain settlement and on-chain delivery.
For compliance: Since CBDC transactions are auditable, exchanges can implement anti-money laundering measures and suspicious transaction monitoring more effectively. Withdrawal routes become more transparent, making it easier to meet local regulatory requirements.
Choose the right wallet tier, authorize cautiously, and maintain device security.
First, understand your country’s tiered wallet policy. Use a basic wallet for small daily payments to minimize unnecessary data exposure; upgrade to an advanced wallet only when higher limits or cross-border features are needed.
Opt for official or licensed institution wallets and disable unnecessary transaction profiling or marketing data collection. For payment scenarios, choose permissions that are “for this transaction only” and avoid granting access to unrelated data such as location or contacts.
Ensure device and network security. Keep your operating system and wallet apps updated, avoid making large transfers over public Wi-Fi, and enable two-factor authentication for increased protection against unauthorized access.
Be aware of transaction limits and traceability. As CBDC transactions are auditable, avoid intentionally circumventing rules through frequent splitting of transactions, unusual timing, or cross-regional transfers—these actions may trigger risk controls or impact account usage.
Global momentum has accelerated in 2024 with more pilots underway.
According to public surveys throughout 2024, about 94% of central banks are researching or testing CBDCs, with over half planning to advance retail or wholesale projects in the coming years. This sets the stage for expanded pilots this year.
By Q4 2025, aggregated data from third-party trackers and central bank reports indicate that over 130 economies are exploring CBDCs globally, with about 20 having entered pilot stages. Retail CBDCs have been publicly launched in economies including the Bahamas (Sand Dollar), Nigeria (eNaira), Jamaica (JAM-DEX), and the Eastern Caribbean Currency Union (DCash).
In cross-border use cases for 2024–2025, wholesale CBDC pilots continue to grow, with more than five central banks participating in regional cooperation projects focused on real-time interbank settlement and faster cross-border payments. Most pilots target scenarios like trade settlement, securities custody, and “delivery versus payment” for instant settlement in FX transactions.
Retail applications have also expanded over the past year. Public transit systems, utility bill payments, and government subsidy distribution are now common use cases for CBDC—with small-value payments characterized by instant confirmation and low fees. Some cities are experimenting with offline micropayments to enhance financial inclusion.
Both are pegged to fiat currencies but differ in nature, network structure, and governance.
Issuer: CBDCs are issued and redeemed by central banks; stablecoins are typically issued by private companies backed by bank deposits or government bonds.
Network access: CBDCs operate on permissioned networks that require regulatory approval; stablecoins circulate freely on public blockchains where anyone can hold or transfer them.
Risk and guarantees: CBDCs directly represent central bank credit—1:1 with local currency and free from price volatility. Stablecoin stability depends on reserve quality and transparency; risks include depegging or liquidation events.
Use cases: CBDCs are suited for public payments, tax collection, welfare disbursement, and interbank settlement; stablecoins excel in on-chain trading, DeFi liquidity provision, and cross-chain transfers. On exchanges, both serve as fiat on-ramps or trading mediums but must adhere to local regulatory requirements.
No. A CBDC is a digital form of legal tender issued by a central bank. While both exist digitally, a CBDC is directly controlled and backed by the government with official legal status. Cryptocurrencies generally run on blockchain technology maintained by decentralized communities without single-government oversight. In short: CBDC is official digital money; cryptocurrency is private digital asset.
A CBDC lets you hold central bank assets directly—think of it as digital cash—making transfers faster and cheaper. It reduces reliance on commercial banks for safeguarding funds. In some cases, it enables offline payments and optimized cross-border remittances for simpler daily transactions and international transfers.
Not entirely. CBDCs and cryptocurrencies serve different needs: CBDCs provide safe, stable payment solutions under government regulation; cryptocurrencies emphasize decentralization and self-sovereignty of assets—useful for censorship resistance or unrestricted global movement. Both may coexist long-term: CBDCs focus on payments; cryptocurrencies retain their unique value in investment and autonomy.
Progress depends on each country's technological foundation, regulatory environment, and strategic priorities. Developed nations carefully balance privacy with regulatory needs and advance cautiously; some developing countries move faster due to limited financial infrastructure in hopes of expanding financial access via CBDCs. China has made rapid progress; smaller economies like Singapore show notable advancement; countries like the US remain in the assessment phase evaluating long-term impacts.
Most CBDCs remain in pilot or pre-launch stages. You can learn about your country's plans in advance by following updates on platforms like Gate. Familiarize yourself with basic concepts and operational procedures. When your country launches its CBDC officially, simply download the official app and complete identity verification—no major technical changes required. Using it will be as straightforward as mobile payments today.


