$8.9 Trillion in Physical Cash — Less Than 10% of the World's Money
When most people imagine "money," they picture coins and banknotes — the tangible currency you can hold, fold, and hand to a shopkeeper. Yet this physical cash represents a remarkably small fraction of the world's total money. Global M0 (physical cash in circulation) totals approximately $8.9 trillion, while the broader M2 money supply stands at approximately $98.6 trillion. This means physical currency accounts for less than 10% of total liquid money — the remaining 90%+ exists only as electronic entries in bank databases, created primarily when commercial banks issue loans. Every time a bank approves a mortgage, car loan, or business line of credit, it creates new digital money by crediting the borrower's account — no printing press required.
The paradox of physical cash in 2026 is that its value continues to grow even as its use for transactions declines. Across virtually every major economy, the total value of banknotes in circulation has increased year-over-year for decades — including through the COVID-19 pandemic, when many observers predicted cash would disappear entirely. The explanation lies in cash's dual function: while it is used less frequently for point-of-sale transactions (replaced by cards, mobile payments, and digital wallets), it is used more as a store of value, precautionary reserve, and medium of exchange in the informal economy. During financial crises, natural disasters, and geopolitical uncertainty, demand for physical cash typically surges as individuals seek a tangible asset that does not depend on functioning banking systems, electricity, or internet connectivity. For context on how monetary systems shape the broader economy, see our analysis of the global economy.
The distribution of physical cash is extraordinarily uneven. The US dollar, euro, Chinese yuan, Japanese yen, and British pound together account for the vast majority of global M0. The remaining 175+ currencies recognised by the United Nations collectively contribute a relatively small share, though precise data is difficult to aggregate due to varying reporting standards, exchange rate fluctuations, and the inclusion (or exclusion) of central bank reserves in different countries' M0 definitions. The central banks that issue these currencies play fundamentally different roles: the Federal Reserve and ECB primarily manage mature, stable monetary systems, while the People's Bank of China is actively pioneering a hybrid physical-digital currency model through the digital yuan (e-CNY) that may preview the future of cash worldwide.

Cash by Currency — USD $2.3T, Euro €1.6T, Yuan ¥10.47T, Yen ¥111T
Breaking down the world's $8.9 trillion in physical cash by currency reveals stark differences in how nations use and value tangible money. The data below draws from each country's central bank publications and represents the most current available figures for currency in circulation — defined as banknotes and coins held by the public, outside the vaults of commercial banks and the central bank itself.
| Currency | Local Value | USD Equiv. | Notes/Coins | Key Fact |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US Dollar (USD) | $2,322.9B | $2.3T | 55.4B notes | ~50% held outside US; $100 bill dominant |
| Euro (EUR) | €1.6T | ~$1.7T | 30.4B notes | 20 Eurozone countries; €50 most common |
| Chinese Yuan (CNY) | ¥10.47T | ~$1.45T | Includes e-CNY | Digital yuan integrated into M0 stats |
| Japanese Yen (JPY) | ¥110.97T | ~$750B | ¥10,000 note popular | Slight dip in 2025; cash-heavy society |
| British Pound (GBP) | £92.58B | ~$117B | 4 denominations | £5, £10, £20, £50; polymer notes |
| Indian Rupee (INR) | ₹35.2T | ~$420B | Post-demonetisation growth | Cash dominant economy despite UPI |
| Swiss Franc (CHF) | CHF 88B | ~$100B | CHF 1000 note exists | Highest-value banknote in circulation |
| Other 170+ Currencies | Various | ~$2.0T+ | Various | Emerging markets, commodity currencies |
Physical Cash by Currency — USD Value ($ Billions)
US Dollar — $2.3T in Circulation, 55.4B Banknotes, Half Held Abroad
The United States dollar is the undisputed king of physical cash. With approximately $2,322.9 billion ($2.3 trillion) in currency in circulation across 55.4 billion individual banknotes, the dollar represents roughly 26% of all physical cash on Earth by value. The growth trajectory has been remarkable: US currency in circulation has more than tripled from $719.9 billion in 2004, reflecting both domestic economic expansion and the dollar's unique role as the world's primary reserve currency and store of value.
The $100 bill accounts for the lion's share of currency value — a striking fact given that the $100 note is rarely used for everyday transactions in the United States. The explanation lies in the dollar's function as a global store of value: the Federal Reserve estimates that approximately 50% of all US currency is held outside the United States, primarily in developing economies where individuals use dollar banknotes as a hedge against local currency devaluation, political instability, and banking system fragility. In countries experiencing hyperinflation (such as Venezuela, Zimbabwe, and Argentina), physical US dollars function as a parallel currency for high-value transactions, savings, and international trade. This international demand for dollars gives the United States an economic advantage often called the "exorbitant privilege" — the ability to issue the world's most-demanded currency at essentially zero marginal cost. For context on how the dollar's dominance shapes the US economy, see our analysis of US GDP.
Euro — €1.6 Trillion, 30.4 Billion Banknotes, 20 Nations
The euro is the second-most-held physical currency in the world, with over 30.4 billion banknotes valued at approximately €1.6 trillion (~$1.7 trillion) in circulation as of mid-2025. Serving 20 Eurozone member states with a combined population of approximately 350 million people, the euro is unique among major currencies in being shared across sovereign nations with different economic structures, fiscal policies, and banking systems. The €50 note is the most commonly circulated denomination, while the €500 note (often called the "Bin Laden" for its association with money laundering) was discontinued for new issuance in 2019 but remains legal tender and continues to circulate.
The Eurozone's M2 money supply hit €15.74 trillion in May 2025, meaning physical cash (€1.6 trillion) represents approximately 10% of broad money — slightly higher than the global average, reflecting the still-significant role of cash in southern European economies (Italy, Spain, Greece) compared to the near-cashless societies of northern Europe (Sweden, Finland, Netherlands). The European Central Bank is actively developing the digital euro, which could supplement physical banknotes as a direct central bank liability available to consumers through digital wallets. The interplay between cash usage and inflation dynamics in Europe is explored in our analysis of inflation trends in Europe.
Asia — Chinese Yuan ¥10.47T (Digital Included), Japanese Yen ¥111T
China's cash in circulation (M0) reached ¥10.47 trillion (approximately $1.45 trillion) by end of 2022, with a crucial distinction: China has strategically integrated its digital yuan (e-CNY) into official M0 statistics. By late 2022, 13.61 billion digital yuan were circulating as part of the People's Bank of China's pioneering CBDC programme. This hybrid approach — counting both physical banknotes and central bank-issued digital tokens as M0 — represents the most advanced fusion of traditional and digital money by any major economy. China's M2 money supply is the world's largest at approximately $45.7 trillion, meaning physical cash represents a relatively small fraction of China's massive financial system. The sheer scale of China's economy is explored in our analysis of China's GDP.
Japan remains one of the world's most cash-intensive developed economies, with currency in circulation of approximately ¥110.97 trillion (~$750 billion). Despite being a technological leader, Japan's attachment to cash is cultural and structural: the ¥10,000 note (approximately $67) is widely used for daily transactions, vending machines accept cash ubiquitously, and many small businesses and restaurants remain cash-only. Japan's M2 of approximately ¥1.268 quadrillion (~$8.5 trillion) represents decades of ultra-loose monetary policy by the Bank of Japan. The country's persistent deflation and negative interest rate environment (only recently ended) made holding physical cash virtually cost-free, removing the typical incentive to deposit money in interest-bearing accounts.

Cash vs Digital — 90% Digital, Mobile Payments Surge, Cash Still Growing
The most counterintuitive finding in global cash statistics is the coexistence of two seemingly contradictory trends: cash usage for transactions is declining while the total value of cash in circulation continues to rise. This paradox is explained by cash's evolving role. In its transactional function (buying groceries, paying for meals, settling bills), cash is being rapidly displaced by debit cards, credit cards, mobile payments (Apple Pay, Google Pay, WeChat Pay, UPI), and real-time bank transfers. In Sweden, cash represents less than 1% of point-of-sale transactions. In China, mobile payments processed by Alipay and WeChat Pay exceeded $40 trillion in annual volume. Even in cash-heavy economies like Japan, Germany, and India, digital payment penetration is accelerating.
However, as a store of value and crisis reserve, cash demand has been increasing. During the COVID-19 pandemic, currency in circulation surged globally as individuals hoarded banknotes as a precautionary measure despite simultaneously reducing cash payments. During banking crises (Silicon Valley Bank collapse in 2023, various emerging market episodes), cash withdrawals spike as depositors seek the safety of a tangible asset. In the informal economy — estimated at 15-30% of GDP in many developing countries — cash remains the primary medium of exchange because it is anonymous, requires no banking infrastructure, and leaves no digital trail. The relationship between digital payments and traditional finance is explored in our analysis of global fintech trends.
Cash as % of M2 — Major Economies
CBDCs — 100+ Projects, China Leads, Digital Euro & Pound Coming
The rise of Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) represents the most significant potential transformation of physical cash since the abandonment of the gold standard. A CBDC is a digital form of a country's fiat currency issued directly by the central bank — unlike cryptocurrency (decentralised, not government-backed) or commercial bank deposits (which are liabilities of private banks), a CBDC would be a direct liability of the central bank, carrying the same government guarantee as physical banknotes but in digital form. As of 2026, over 100 countries are exploring, piloting, or launching CBDCs.
China's digital yuan (e-CNY) is the most advanced major-economy CBDC, with 13.61 billion digital yuan in circulation and pilot programmes running across dozens of cities for retail payments, government disbursements, and cross-border trade. The European Central Bank is in the "preparation phase" for the digital euro, targeting a potential launch by 2028-2029. The Bank of England is exploring a "digital pound" (nicknamed "Britcoin"). The Federal Reserve has been more cautious, studying wholesale CBDC applications while political debates about surveillance and financial privacy have slowed retail CBDC development in the US. If major CBDCs reach full deployment, they could reshape how money is created, distributed, and monitored — potentially making some physical cash obsolete while raising profound questions about government surveillance of financial transactions. The implications of CBDCs for interest rate policy and monetary transmission are closely linked to the dynamics explored in our analysis of global interest rates.
US Dollar Cash in Circulation Growth — 2004 to 2024
Despite the surge in digital payments, the value of physical cash in circulation has increased in virtually every major economy over the past two decades. US currency grew from $720B (2004) to $2,323B (2024) — more than tripling. Euro banknotes grew from €500B to €1.6T. The explanation: cash is shifting from a transaction medium to a store of value and crisis reserve. During the 2020 pandemic, 2023 bank failures, and geopolitical crises, cash withdrawals surged even as contactless payments became the norm. As long as people value a tangible, anonymous, electricity-independent form of money, physical cash will continue to grow.

Physical Cash — Key Statistics at a Glance
Outlook 2027-2030 — CBDCs, Cashless Societies, Cash Resilience
The future of physical cash will be shaped by three forces: the deployment of CBDCs (which could absorb some of cash's store-of-value function while adding programmability and traceability), the continued expansion of digital payments (reducing cash's transactional role), and crisis-driven demand spikes (which periodically reinforce cash's value as a resilient, technology-independent form of money). The most likely scenario is not the elimination of physical cash but its gradual transformation into a specialised instrument — used primarily for small transactions in informal economies, as a privacy-preserving payment method, and as a store of value during periods of uncertainty, while CBDCs and digital payments handle the majority of transaction volume. For broader context on how global financial infrastructure is evolving, see our analysis of global financial markets.
Frequently Asked Questions — Physical Cash
~$8.9 trillion (M0). USD: $2.3T (55.4B notes). Euro: €1.6T (30.4B). Yuan: ¥10.47T. Yen: ¥111T. GBP: £92.6B. Less than 10% of M2 ($98.6T).
Less than 10%. M0 $8.9T vs M2 $98.6T. Over 90% of money is digital — bank deposits, not physical notes. Most money created by bank lending, not printing presses.
US Dollar: $2.3T (55.4B notes). ~50% held abroad. $100 bill dominant by value. Euro #2: €1.6T. Yuan #3: ¥10.47T. Growth: USD 3.2x since 2004.
Paradoxically, no — cash value is growing. Cash payments declining, but cash as store of value increasing. Crisis demand (pandemic, bank runs) drives surges. Cash grew 3.2x in US since 2004.
Central Bank Digital Currency. Digital fiat money issued by central bank. China leads with digital yuan (13.61B units). ECB planning digital euro (2028-29). 100+ countries exploring. Unlike crypto: government-backed, centrally controlled.
Primary: Federal Reserve — Currency in Circulation Data
Primary: European Central Bank — Euro Banknotes & Coins in Circulation
Primary: Bank for International Settlements — Currency in Circulation & Payment Statistics
BusinessStats: All M0 aggregates, currency-by-currency breakdowns, cash-to-M2 ratios, and CBDC analysis are based on BusinessStats proprietary research combining central bank publications, BIS CPMI data, IMF International Financial Statistics, and CBDC tracker databases.
