The Tokyo Metropolitan Government has launched a grant program offering companies up to 40 million yen – about $250,000 – to create real-world use cases around digital yen stablecoins, administered by the city’s Industrial and Labor Affairs Bureau under Japan’s Payment Services Act.
However, the detail missing from most headlines is what this program actually reveals about the government’s CBDC strategy: Tokyo is not forcing adoption of the digital yen, but buying it. This distinction is extremely important, both for understanding how state-backed digital currencies actually spread and for what it says about how the digital yen compares to decentralized crypto alternatives. This article details the mechanics before drawing conclusions.
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What is the Tokyo Digital Yen Subsidy and who is it for?
Think of the program as a renovation grant for a small business: the government doesn’t require you to upgrade your store, but it will cover a significant portion of the cost if you do. Tokyo’s subsidy covers up to two-thirds of eligible expenses, meaning businesses still have a stake in the game – they don’t get an advantage.
Eligible costs include external infrastructure for processing digital yen payments, expert consultations, compliance audits and systems development. An applicant company must have a headquarters or branch in Tokyo, and the project must be completed – or at least verifiably underway – by the end of the fiscal year in which the grant is approved, which runs through March 31, 2027.
The agentic future of JPYSC starts here.@StartaleGroup And @NonagonCapital are joining forces to develop agent payment use cases on JPYSC, Japan’s first bank-backed yen stablecoin, co-developed with SBI. pic.twitter.com/NIq5V2sMeW
– JPYSC (@JPYStableCoin) March 27, 2026
It is essential that participating initiatives use actually issued yen stablecoins and comply with the Payment Services Act – the Japanese framework that classifies stablecoins as “electronic payment instruments” and restricts who can issue them to licensed banks, trust companies and registered money transfer providers. Japan’s first yen-pegged stablecoin only launched in October, so this is truly early-stage territory. The guidelines themselves, officially titled Guidelines for Providing Subsidies for Promoting the Socialization of Stablecoins, were released on April 15, 2026. This is part of Japan’s broader efforts to formalize digital assets, which you can read more about in Japan’s classification of cryptocurrencies as financial assets.
Why subsidies are more important than CBDC deployment mandates
The Tokyo program is a classic example of adoption by incentive rather than rule. Governments around the world have quietly learned that mandating new payments infrastructure tends to backfire: businesses resist, implementation becomes complicated, and public trust erodes. Offering money instead is slower but stickier.

The Tokyo Metropolitan Government has clearly stated its goal: “to solve social problems faced by Tokyo residents or businesses, improve the convenience of payments and remittances, and promote the construction of a digital economic zone based on the yen.” This is a broad mandate. Payments, remittances and social infrastructure are all designated targets – suggesting that Tokyo is trying to create an entire ecosystem, not just launch a pilot project.
This, however, is where the structural tension lies. If companies adopt yen stablecoins primarily through a $250,000 grant, adoption is real but conditional. Remove the subsidy, and the question becomes whether the infrastructure built is strong enough to support its use on its own merits. This is what open variable regulators rarely highlight in press releases.
Japan’s regulatory framework actually creates a competitive advantage for yen stablecoins. Dollar-denominated stablecoins like Tether dominate globally in terms of market capitalization, but in Japan they are subject to the same strict anti-money laundering and user protection requirements as domestic issuers – without the regulatory familiarity of the country. Tokyo is betting that local businesses, given a financial boost, will choose the option that complies with local standards.
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