TL;DR
- The Czech National Bank launched a pilot using roughly $1 million in Bitcoin, sparking a discussion that is beginning to spread across the Eurozone.
- The test integrates Bitcoin into the treasury and real-time payments, marking the first structured adoption by a central bank in the bloc.
- According to Coinbase, the pilotās formal process could be replicated in other countries and drive wider institutional adoption.
The Czech National Bank has launched a Bitcoin pilot inside its national treasury, opening a debate that is already gaining traction in other Eurozone countries.
The test involves using roughly $1 million in BTC and operates on two fronts: direct balance-sheet management and real-time payment transactions. What stands out is not the amount, but the fact that a monetary authority in the European bloc decided to incorporate an asset that, until now, had remained outside the operational scope of traditional central banks.
The Pilot Could Spread Across the Eurozone
John DāAgostino, Coinbaseās head of institutional, explained that the pilot did not emerge as a reaction to economic pressure or as a disruptive measure aimed at correcting imbalances. He highlighted that the initiative followed a formal process involving RFPs, provider selection and internal policy adoption. That structure could act as a contagion mechanism: once a Eurozone central bank takes this path, others may feel encouraged to follow it.
DāAgostino argued that institutional adoption has always progressed when liquidity, market structure and the presence of credible companies align. In his view, regulatory clarity influences decisions but does not function as the primary driver. He noted that spot ETFs already play a critical role because issuers must rebalance their positions by design. That creates demand cycles that did not exist when Bitcoin depended solely on discretionary investors.
Banks Begin Using Bitcoin Not as a Reserve, but for Its Utility
The Czech pilot pushes that logic to the highest tier of the financial hierarchy: a central bank choosing to experiment with Bitcoin even though it has access to standard funding within the European Union. This places BTC in a context where regulatory caution dominates and where tests rarely proceed without a detailed analysis of risks and objectives. DāAgostino avoided calling it a step toward āreserve assetā status, but the implication is clear: a monetary authority that does not need Bitcoin is adopting it to evaluate its usefulness in payments and balance-sheet tools.
It also functions as an effort to rebuild cryptoās reputation after a series of governance failures. DāAgostino compared recent market breakdowns with under-discussed events in traditional finance and argued that the industry needs a more stable institutional profile. If the pilot gains momentum, expansion may come from within the European system itself, not just from U.S. asset managers.

