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Oct 29, 2025

Digital Yuan Transactions Reach ¥14.2 Trillion; Hong Kong Eyes Higher Wallet Caps for Travellers

Digital Yuan Transactions Reach ¥14.2 Trillion; Hong Kong Eyes Higher Wallet Caps for Travellers
The People’s Bank of China disclosed that cumulative digital-renminbi (e-CNY) transactions hit RMB 14.2 trillion (US $2 trillion) by the end of September, with 225 million personal wallets now in circulation. Speaking at the Financial Street Forum, Governor Pan Gongsheng confirmed that an international operations centre in Shanghai will spearhead cross-border pilots.

Hours later the Hong Kong Monetary Authority said it is working with the PBoC to raise the per-transaction and annual limits on Hong Kong e-CNY wallets—currently capped at RMB 2,000 per payment and RMB 50,000 per year—so as to better serve frequent cross-border travellers and business users. Lawmakers in the territory have lobbied for higher ceilings and real-name verification to unlock larger transfers.

Why it matters for mobility: foreign visitors to mainland China can already top up e-CNY wallets via Visa and Mastercard, avoiding card-acceptance gaps at small merchants. Higher Hong Kong limits would let multinational staff settle hotel bills, taxi fares and even housing deposits without opening a mainland bank account, streamlining short-term assignments.

The PBoC hinted that Phase II of the pilot will extend to border cities such as Shenzhen and Zhuhai, integrating e-CNY with popular transit cards—a boon for commuters shuttling between Hong Kong and Guangdong’s manufacturing hubs. For compliance teams, the digital trail offers granular spend data but also raises questions about data localisation; current guidelines require that cross-border transaction records be stored onshore for at least ten years.

Travel managers should begin educating assignees on wallet setup and usage limits. While cash and international cards remain widely accepted in tier-one cities, smaller destinations and high-speed-rail stations increasingly prefer e-payment only. Experts forecast that e-CNY could account for 15 percent of tourist spending in China by 2027 if the caps are liberalised as expected.
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