Russia is on track to launch its central bank digital currency (CBDC) on September 1, with Bank of Russia Governor Elvira Nabiullina declaring that preparations are complete. "Everything is r
Russia is on track to launch its central bank digital currency (CBDC) on September 1, with Bank of Russia Governor Elvira Nabiullina declaring that preparations are complete. "Everything is ready for the widespread use of the digital ruble," Nabiullina said during a briefing at the Central Bank Financial Conference.
Russia's central bank governor confirmed that the country was prepared to roll out its CBDC following the timeline it laid out last year.The CBDC will launch as a complement to Russia's fiat currency and will initially be accepted by financial and credit institutions.
A Phased Rollout With Legal Backing
According to the Bank of Russia's first deputy governor, Vladimir Chistyukhin, the law allowing the digital ruble will be enacted on September 1, with a transition period running until July 2027.Retailers that are clients of major banks and whose revenue for the previous year exceeds 120 million rubles will also be required to accept payments in digital rubles starting from September 1, 2026.
The requirement will be extended to all banks in stages by September 2028, with banks holding a universal licence and their retail clients with annual revenue above 30 million rubles mandated to start processing digital ruble transactions on September 1, 2027.Retail outlets with annual revenue of less than 5 million rubles will be exempt from the obligation to accept digital ruble payments.
"Systemically important banks and large retailers will need to join in to accept it," Nabiullina said, adding: "Technologically, everything is ready; we've done a lot of preparatory work for this stage."
Geopolitical Context and Public Skepticism
Moscow has promoted the digital ruble as a tool for international transactions that bypasses foreign commercial banks and Western financial infrastructure like SWIFT, raising concerns about Russia's ability to evade sanctions.The launch has already been targeted by preemptive sanctions from European Union authorities, announced in April, in response to Russia's war of aggression against Ukraine.
Despite the official readiness, uptake is far from guaranteed. A recent survey found that 51% of Russians say they will not use the digital ruble, citing privacy and security concerns.Digital rubles will circulate alongside cash and non-cash rubles, and all transactions with the digital currency will be fee-free for Russian citizens.
Sources:CoinTelegraph: Russia on Track for Digital Ruble Rollout on Sept. 1Bank of Russia: Large-scale introduction of digital ruble to begin on 1 September 2026Decrypt: Russia Is Ready for Widespread Use of Digital Ruble by September