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Main Authors: Senn, Judith, Judmayer, Aljosha, Stifter, Nicholas, Böhme, Rainer
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.16320
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author Senn, Judith
Judmayer, Aljosha
Stifter, Nicholas
Böhme, Rainer
author_facet Senn, Judith
Judmayer, Aljosha
Stifter, Nicholas
Böhme, Rainer
contents Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) are proposed as a public response to the uptake of privately run digital payments, with the digital euro, under development by the European Central Bank (ECB), serving as a prominent example. This momentum provides a unique opportunity to fundamentally rethink the future of money, and, assuming wide adoption, to establish payment systems that offer strong cryptographic security and privacy guarantees from the start. While the central banks in charge are investigating privacy-enhancing technologies (PETs), they often conclude that PETs are immature or insufficiently scalable. Moreover, these efforts tend to examine primitives in isolation, offering little insight into how a system using these PETs would scale. This systematisation of knowledge, therefore, provides a structured, top-down technical analysis of 36 payment system designs of complete system proposals that can inform CBDC designs or were explicitly proposed for this application. We identify recurring design patterns, technical trade-offs, and implementation challenges. Concluding, we highlight research gaps, including offline payments and post-quantum security.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_16320
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Systematization of Knowledge: The Design Space of Digital Payment Systems with Potential for CBDC
Senn, Judith
Judmayer, Aljosha
Stifter, Nicholas
Böhme, Rainer
Cryptography and Security
Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) are proposed as a public response to the uptake of privately run digital payments, with the digital euro, under development by the European Central Bank (ECB), serving as a prominent example. This momentum provides a unique opportunity to fundamentally rethink the future of money, and, assuming wide adoption, to establish payment systems that offer strong cryptographic security and privacy guarantees from the start. While the central banks in charge are investigating privacy-enhancing technologies (PETs), they often conclude that PETs are immature or insufficiently scalable. Moreover, these efforts tend to examine primitives in isolation, offering little insight into how a system using these PETs would scale. This systematisation of knowledge, therefore, provides a structured, top-down technical analysis of 36 payment system designs of complete system proposals that can inform CBDC designs or were explicitly proposed for this application. We identify recurring design patterns, technical trade-offs, and implementation challenges. Concluding, we highlight research gaps, including offline payments and post-quantum security.
title Systematization of Knowledge: The Design Space of Digital Payment Systems with Potential for CBDC
topic Cryptography and Security
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.16320