
Inside the Threadneedle of the Bank of England: What should money look like in a digital economy? This seemingly straightforward question has been posed for years by economists, policy teams, and street offices. The solution they are aiming for—a digital pound, sometimes referred to as Britcoin, though no one in official circles seems particularly fond of that moniker—is still developing, being tested in a lab setting through July 2026, examined in policy papers, and discussed in parliamentary committees. There has been no decision to build it. It’s important to acknowledge this fact because a lot of British ambition tends to stall in the space between learning something and committing to it.
The diagnosis that underpins the case for a central bank digital currency is difficult to refute. According to Bank of England research, online transactions increased from less than 5% to more than 25% of retail spending between 2010 and 2022, indicating that cash usage in the UK has been declining for years. There is a legitimate worry that the anchor function of central bank money, the public, government-backed form of currency that underpins everything, may eventually become marginal as private digital money, stablecoins, and tokenized financial assets expand in size. In part, the digital pound is intended to stop that from occurring. It’s a means of guaranteeing that something publicly issued and publicly accountable remains at the core of the UK economy even in a future where the majority of money moves through private platforms.
The decisions being made today regarding economic design have greater implications than they might seem. The proposed individual holding limit, which is presently being assessed between £10,000 and £20,000, is one of the most closely watched. It is not a cap. It exists because one of the justifiable concerns about a retail CBDC is that, in times of financial strain, such as a bank run or a crisis of confidence, people might quickly transfer substantial amounts from commercial bank deposits into the digital pound, which has no default risk. After all, it is a direct liability of the central bank. If that kind of outflow occurs quickly enough, it has the potential to destabilize the banks that provide loans to households and businesses. In order to keep the digital pound from becoming a systemic risk in the very system it is intended to support, the holding cap is a structural restriction. It is still genuinely debatable whether any cap is the best strategy or if that cap is set at the appropriate level.
As this process develops, there is a sense that the UK is being extremely cautious—possibly excessive, possibly necessary, but it’s difficult to tell yet. The digital pound ran the risk of being “a solution in search of a problem,” according to the House of Lords Economic Affairs Committee’s 2022 conclusion, which continues to be discussed in policy talks. The committee may have been correct, or the rate of change in private digital finance may have accelerated since then. Instead of merely running theoretical models, the Bank of England’s Digital Pound Lab is working with industry stakeholders on real-world use cases, offline payment capabilities, and business model testing in an effort to provide practical answers to some of these questions.
Parliament is involved in what follows. Regardless of the Bank’s decision, a rollout before the late 2020s would be nearly impossible due to the need for primary legislation. Even though it seems lengthy, that timeline might be suitable for something this important. Digital euros, digital dollars, digital yuan—the majority of the world’s major economies fall somewhere along this spectrum, moving at varying rates and closely observing each other’s decisions. For its part, the UK is taking a measured approach to the digital pound, which may indicate caution or wisdom. Depending on the day you ask, it’s probably both.
