The digital dollar isn't dead. But it just got shelved for four more years.
What Happened
On Thursday, the Senate passed the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act 89-10, with a CBDC ban buried inside the 302-page housing bill. The amendment bars the Federal Reserve from issuing a central bank digital currency — or anything "substantially similar" — either directly or through a bank intermediary, through the end of 2030.
The vote was overwhelmingly bipartisan. Senator Ted Cruz pushed for a permanent ban, but that version failed. The 2030 moratorium was the compromise that passed.
The White House backed the bill. Trump signed an executive order in January restricting federal agencies from promoting CBDCs, calling them a threat to "financial system stability, individual privacy, and U.S. sovereignty."
Why It's Controversial
Supporters frame it as a privacy issue. A government-run digital currency would give the Fed direct visibility into every transaction — who you paid, when, and how much. The Blockchain Association called it a threat to "core American values — financial privacy, civil liberties, and limits on state power."
Critics argue the U.S. is ceding ground to China, which is already running live trials of its digital yuan and building cross-border payment networks to rival SWIFT. More than 130 countries are actively developing their own CBDCs. The U.S. just voted to wait.
What Comes Next
The bill now goes to the House, where some conservatives are pushing for a permanent ban — which could complicate passage.
If it clears, the winners are private stablecoin issuers. The bill explicitly carves out stablecoins that are open, permissionless, and privacy-preserving — a direct green light for Circle's USDC and Tether. Removing the Fed as a potential competitor removes a major source of uncertainty for the private stablecoin market.
The digital dollar debate isn't over. It's just been postponed.
