Swiss Bitcoin reserve campaigners are set to abandon their attempt to force the Swiss National Bank to hold Bitcoin after failing to gather enough signatures for a national vote.
The campaign, known as the Bitcoin Initiative, needed 100,000 valid signatures within 18 months to trigger Switzerland’s referendum process. With only a few weeks left before the deadline, organizers had collected roughly half that number, leaving the proposal far short of the legal requirement.
The result is a setback for crypto advocates who wanted Switzerland’s central bank to treat Bitcoin more like gold or foreign currency reserves. It also shows how difficult it remains to move Bitcoin from a private investment asset into the formal toolkit of central bank reserve management.
What the Bitcoin Initiative Wanted to Change
The proposal aimed to amend Switzerland’s constitution so the Swiss National Bank would be required to hold Bitcoin alongside gold as part of its official reserves.
That idea was ambitious from the start. Switzerland has a direct-democracy system that gives citizens a path to propose constitutional changes, but the bar is intentionally high. Supporters must collect 100,000 valid signatures before an initiative can move toward a nationwide vote.
For Bitcoin advocates, the appeal was clear. Switzerland is already one of Europe’s most important crypto hubs, with a long-running blockchain ecosystem centered around Zug’s “Crypto Valley.” Supporters argued that adding Bitcoin to national reserves would strengthen Switzerland’s financial independence and diversify exposure away from traditional fiat currencies.
Why the Campaign Is Being Dropped
Campaign founder Yves Bennaim acknowledged that the effort was always a difficult one. Organizers are now expected to let the initiative lapse rather than continue pushing with too few signatures.
That does not mean the campaign had no impact. The proposal forced a public debate about whether Bitcoin can play any role in sovereign reserves, especially at a time when governments, institutions and asset managers are paying closer attention to digital assets.
Still, the signature shortfall suggests that mainstream Swiss voters were not ready to back a constitutional change requiring the central bank to hold BTC. For many citizens, Bitcoin may still feel too volatile, too technical, or too politically charged for central bank reserves.
The Swiss National Bank Remains Skeptical
The Swiss National Bank has repeatedly pushed back against the idea of holding Bitcoin. Its main concerns are volatility, liquidity, and whether crypto assets can meet the standards required for official reserves.
Central bank reserves are not managed like a speculative portfolio. They are meant to preserve value, support monetary policy, and remain highly liquid during periods of stress. Bitcoin’s supporters argue that the asset is scarce, neutral and resistant to political manipulation. Central bankers tend to focus on its price swings, operational risks and uncertain role during financial crises.
SNB Chairman Martin Schlegel previously said cryptocurrencies did not currently meet the bank’s requirements for reserve assets. That position appears unchanged, even as other parts of the global financial system become more open to Bitcoin exposure.
A Wider Debate About Sovereign Bitcoin Reserves
The Swiss campaign is part of a broader debate about whether governments and central banks should hold Bitcoin.
In the United States, several state-level Bitcoin reserve proposals have gained attention, while some policymakers have discussed Bitcoin as a strategic asset. Elsewhere, central banks have mostly remained cautious, even as they explore blockchain technology, tokenized assets and central bank digital currencies.
The Swiss case is important because it tested whether a crypto-friendly country could turn public interest in Bitcoin into a formal reserve mandate. For now, the answer is no.
That does not close the door permanently. Bitcoin’s institutional profile has changed significantly in recent years, especially after the rise of spot Bitcoin ETFs and growing corporate treasury adoption. But central banks operate with different incentives from asset managers or public companies. Their priority is stability, not upside.
What This Means for Bitcoin Advocates
For Bitcoin advocates, the failed initiative is a reminder that political legitimacy is harder to build than market enthusiasm.
A rising Bitcoin price can attract investors quickly. Changing central bank reserve policy is much slower. It requires public trust, legal clarity and a convincing argument that Bitcoin can serve the conservative needs of a national monetary authority.
The Swiss campaign did not reach that standard this time. But it did put Bitcoin reserves into the political conversation in one of the world’s most important financial centers.
That may be the more lasting result. Even without a referendum, the idea of sovereign Bitcoin exposure is no longer confined to online forums or private investors. It is now part of a real policy debate, even if Switzerland’s central bank is not ready to act on it.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.

















