What EURA is designed to do

EURA is a fiat-backed stablecoin, currently ranked 595th by market capitalization among the assets we track. EURA is a tokenized claim on reserves held by its issuer. The design goal is a stable peg, which makes the relevant questions about EURA reserve quality and redemption, not upside.

EURA is a digital currency designed to enhance the digital economy by enabling secure and efficient transactions within the Eurozone. It aims to provide seamless financial services with low fees and fast processing times.

How the peg is meant to hold

A fiat-backed stablecoin holds its peg through redemption: if EURA trades below its target, arbitrageurs buy it cheap and redeem at par, and vice versa. That arbitrage only works if redemption is real and reserves are sufficient.

EURA is not mined; it is issued as a token rather than secured by its own mining or staking layer.

Background & fundamentals

EURA first went live in 2021, giving it roughly 5 years of on-chain price history to draw on. CoinPaprika classifies the project's development status as "Working product". In sector terms it is most often filed under Ethereum (ETH) Token (ERC-20), Polygon (MATIC) Token, and Arbitrum Ecosystem.

Where EURA sits in the market

With EURA near $1.15, EURA carries a market capitalization of $22.10M. Around $5.05K changes hands across exchanges in a typical 24-hour window. That is a turnover of about 0.02% of the float — on the quieter side, which can mean thinner liquidity for large orders.

EURA carries no fixed maximum supply; issuance follows a programmatic schedule rather than a hard cap. EURA remains -70% beneath its all-time high of $3.87, the kind of gap that historically takes a full cycle or a fresh catalyst to close.

What the price history shows

Recent moves read 24-hour -0.04%, 7-day -1.34%.

Volatility profile

Recent action puts EURA in the Low-volatility band — it has been relatively stable, with moves typical of large-cap, mature assets.

How to evaluate a stablecoin like EURA

For an asset of this type, three lenses matter most:

  • Reserve quality — what backs EURA — cash and short Treasuries are safer than commercial paper or crypto collateral — and who attests to it.
  • Redemption access — whether holders can actually redeem at par, and how quickly, under stress.
  • Regulatory standing — the issuer's jurisdiction and licensing, which increasingly determines which stablecoins survive at scale.

This page pulls live market data, on-chain stats where available, exchange-by-exchange volume, and our forecast model into one view so you can work through those questions in a single place. None of it is investment advice — it is a structured starting point for your own research.