Czech Republic Invests in Crypto, With Eye on Eventual Bitcoin Reserve

The nation’s central bank has unveiled a pilot investment in Bitcoin, stablecoins, and tokenized deposits to better understand how to adopt digital assets.

By Sander Lutz

3 min read

The Czech Republic has officially invested in crypto. 

On Thursday, the European nation’s central bank announced that—after years of observations from the sidelines—it purchased a “test portfolio” of digital assets it will experiment with over the coming years as it moves towards crypto adoption. 

The $1 million test-case investment consisted primarily of Bitcoin. It also included U.S. dollar-pegged stablecoins and tokenized bank deposits. 

Bank officials will use the funds to better understand the process of purchasing, custodying, and managing digital assets, as well as to simulate crisis scenarios and establish anti-money laundering protocols. 


The experiment appears to be part of a longer-term plan to meaningfully expose the Czech Republic’s banking system to crypto.

In January, the Czech National Bank floated a proposal for a multi-billion dollar Bitcoin reserve. The proposal was immediately shot down by the European Central Bank, however, which oversees both Eurozone countries and non-Euro EU members, including the Czech Republic.

While today's announcement by the Czech National Bank emphasized that the institution has no immediate plans for a Bitcoin reserve, a report accompanying Thursday’s announcement noted that “infrastructure built during the testing phase” of the crypto pilot could later be used in “routine operation” to hold digital assets in the central bank’s reserves.

Aleš Michl, governor of the Czech National Bank, said Thursday that the institution will produce an overall assessment of the crypto pilot program in two to three years.

“It is realistic to expect that, in the future, it will be easy to use the koruna to buy tokenised Czech bonds and more besides,” the governor said, referencing the Czech national currency. “With one tap an espresso; with another an investment such as a bond or another asset that used to be the preserve of larger investors. As a central bank, we want to test this path.”

Analysis accompanying today’s news focused primarily on the potential risks and opportunities posed by investing in Bitcoin. The report also underscored pro-crypto moves by the Trump administration, which the Czech government said have created a “significantly more favorable” regulatory environment for digital assets. 

Bitcoin can now be considered a mature and viable project, despite various well-known problems that have accompanied it in the past and persist to this day,” the report said.

“From the central bank’s perspective, we consider it appropriate now to start testing the technology and assessing it in detail,” it continued.

The Czech central bank also noted the increasing importance of stablecoins—particularly, Tether’s USDT and Circle’s USDC token—to the global economy. 

As the United States aggressively pursues a pro-crypto agenda under the second Trump administration, the shift is beginning to reverberate globally. Last week, the leadership of the Bank of England—which has historically been fairly cautious in its approach to crypto—pledged to move “just as quickly” as the U.S. on stablecoin adoption.

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