TL;DR
- China will allow the digital yuan to earn interest starting January 1, 2026, a change that transforms the e-CNY from digital money into deposit money.
- The e-CNY will begin generating yield to boost adoption, supported by its mandatory legal tender status, which sets it apart from apps such as Alipay and WeChat Pay.
- The People’s Bank of China will retain control over monetary policy and transaction traceability.
China is making a deep adjustment to the design of its digital currency. Starting January 1, 2026, the People’s Bank of China will allow commercial banks to pay interest on digital yuan balances.
This change will redefine the role of the e-CNY within the monetary system. The goal behind the reform is to fix a clear weakness: until now, the digital yuan has functioned as electronic cash, useful for payments but unattractive for holding balances over the long term.
The digital yuan will stop operating solely as digital money and begin to behave like deposit money. In practical terms, users will no longer only be able to spend or transfer digital yuan, but also earn a basic return by holding it. The digital yuan will now compete not only with cash, but also with traditional bank accounts and private payment platforms. However, the Chinese government’s strict controls over this CBDC are a warning to users around the world about the advance of these digital currencies. It is clearer than ever that CBDCs are a desperate attempt by governments to limit the financial freedom of citizens.
The objective is to drive adoption. Despite years of pilots, e-CNY usage still lags behind Alipay and WeChat Pay in everyday life. Those apps dominate mobile payments, but they lack a key feature that the digital yuan does have: legal tender status. In China, merchants are required to accept e-CNY. Private platforms do not have that obligation. Introducing an interest-bearing system reinforces this regulatory advantage and reduces incentives to keep funds outside the official system.
China Will Continue to Enforce Strict Traceability Controls
From a user experience perspective, the digital yuan will not change in any radical way. It allows users to pay, transfer funds, and manage balances from their phones, much like any mobile wallet. The difference lies primarily in the architecture. The e-CNY is backed directly by the central bank and integrates into the core of the monetary system, rather than sitting on a private layer built on top of it.
China has already completed its first international transaction using digital yuan in Laos and continues to expand its cross-border payments infrastructure. The mBridge platform, which connects multiple central banks, enables instant settlements between countries without relying on traditional banking intermediaries.
That said, the payment of interest comes with implicit conditions. Control remains in the hands of the central bank, both over monetary policy and over money traceability. China is not seeking to replicate a decentralized system. It is aiming for efficiency, adoption, and international reach, but under strict state oversight.

