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US CBDC Ban Set to Become Law at Midnight

A new law banning a U.S. digital dollar for four years ensures private sector dominance in the consumer payment and financing landscape.

Curated by Financing Your Way from original reporting by PYMNTS. Summary is AI-assisted and editorially reviewed — see our editorial standards.

FYWBy Financing Your Way EditorialJuly 10, 2026

The landscape for digital payments in the U.S. is facing a significant shift as new legislation looks to ban the creation of a U.S. Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) for the next four years. While this might sound like deep-state banking policy, it directly impacts how you will accept payments in the future. The ban ensures that the federal government will not compete with private-sector payment methods like credit cards, digital wallets, and BNPL providers for at least the next few years. For retailers and service providers, this means the current payment ecosystem remains stable. You don’t have to worry about integrating a government-backed digital dollar into your POS systems just yet. Instead, the focus remains firmly on private fintech innovation. The bill effectively pushes the 'future of money' discussion further down the road, giving private lenders and payment processors a protected environment to continue growing their market share without government intervention. This move is largely driven by privacy concerns and the desire to prevent the Federal Reserve from having direct oversight into individual consumer transactions. For your business, this translates to maintaining the status quo with your current merchant processors and financing partners. The 'digital dollar' will remain a private-sector product rather than a government utility for the foreseeable future.

Source: PYMNTS

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