- The Bank of England plans to release draft stablecoin rules next month
- Britain wants tokenized deposits, stablecoins, and CBDCs operating together
- Earlier proposals triggered backlash over reserve requirements and holding caps
Britain is moving aggressively toward a regulated digital money system, whether parts of the crypto industry are comfortable with it or not. Bank of England Deputy Governor Sarah Breeden confirmed this week that draft stablecoin rules are expected to arrive next month, with final regulations scheduled to be locked in before the end of the year.

The timeline now closely mirrors the pace unfolding in the United States, signaling that major economies are no longer treating stablecoin regulation like some distant future problem. Governments clearly want frameworks in place before adoption scales any further.
The Bank Of England Wants A “Multi-Money” Future
Breeden’s comments during City Week in London revealed something bigger than just stablecoin compliance rules. The Bank of England appears to be building toward what it describes as a “multi-money” retail payments system where traditional bank deposits, tokenized deposits, regulated stablecoins, and potentially even a retail CBDC all operate side by side.
In that structure, central bank money would still function as the core anchor of the financial system while private-sector digital money competes around it. It’s an ambitious vision, honestly, and one that sounds very different from the fully decentralized future many early crypto advocates originally imagined.
Still, regulators increasingly seem convinced that tokenization is inevitable. The debate now is less about whether digital money arrives and more about who controls the rails underneath it.
The Crypto Industry Already Pushed Back Hard
This isn’t the Bank of England’s first attempt at designing stablecoin rules, and earlier proposals triggered heavy criticism from the industry. One draft required stablecoin issuers to hold 40% of reserves as non-interest-bearing deposits directly at the Bank of England, which many firms argued would seriously damage profitability and operational flexibility.

The proposal also included retail holding caps of £20,000 for individuals and £10 million for businesses, adding another layer of concern for companies hoping to scale adoption. Critics argued those restrictions would make British stablecoins far less competitive compared to alternatives operating in friendlier jurisdictions.
Breeden acknowledged that some of the earlier framework ideas were “cumbersome operationally,” which, translated from central bank language, basically means the industry hated them enough to force reconsideration.
Britain And The U.S. Are Taking Very Different Paths
One of the more interesting dynamics here is how sharply regulatory philosophies are diverging globally. While Britain still openly discusses integrating a retail CBDC alongside private stablecoins, parts of the United States are moving in the exact opposite direction.
Several U.S. states, including South Carolina, have already advanced legislation designed to limit or outright block CBDC development entirely. That creates a strange situation where both countries are racing toward digital financial infrastructure while holding fundamentally different ideas about how much direct state involvement should exist.
Britain’s framework is moving quickly enough now that the market probably needs to take it seriously. Whether crypto-native firms fully embrace a future where stablecoins coexist beside government-backed digital currencies is a very different question altogether.











