Ripple opens a larger MEA HQ inside Dubai’s DIFC, doubling team size as demand for regulated blockchain payments grows across Africa and the Middle East.
Ripple announced April 30 the opening of a new Middle East and Africa regional headquarters inside the Dubai International Financial Centre. The official press release puts it simply: the space creates capacity to double the regional team.
The Middle East now accounts for a significant portion of Ripple’s global customer base. That share kept growing. The old office stopped making sense.
Dubai Didn’t Happen Overnight. Neither Did This
Reece Merrick, Ripple’s Managing Director for Middle East and Africa, said the appetite for regulated payment infrastructure was visible from day one in the UAE. “An appetite that is only growing,” Merrick said in the statement.
Zand Bank is on the client list. So is Ctrl Alt. Absa Bank, Garanti BBVA, and Chipper Cash too.
Those aren’t future conversations. They’re live.
Back in March 2025, Ripple became the first blockchain payments provider fully licensed by the DFSA. That distinction had taken years to build. Most firms operating in the region still don’t have it.
RLUSD Got Cleared Inside DIFC. Here Is Why That Matters
The DFSA’s recognition of RLUSD as an approved crypto token is the part that keeps getting underreported. Regulated firms operating inside DIFC can now use the stablecoin directly. Not as an experiment. As infrastructure.
Arif Amiri, CEO of the DIFC Authority, called Ripple “a model for how digital asset firms can operate with both ambition and accountability.” Per the press release, Amiri said it while welcoming the expanded office.
Chipper Cash sits at the intersection of both stories. Mobile payments across Africa. Already a Ripple client. RLUSD now cleared for use in the DIFC.
Africa’s cross-border payment corridors carry some of the highest transaction fees anywhere. Legacy rails weren’t designed for them. The Ripple and Zand Bank RLUSD-AEDZ liquidity bridge launched earlier this year points at exactly the kind of infrastructure the continent needs.
The UAE’s cross-border payments market alone sits above $40 billion. Africa’s piece of that equation doesn’t get counted in that number.
Ripple’s 2024 survey of MEA finance leaders put speed as the top reason institutions want blockchain payments. Sixty-four percent of respondents said it plainly. The demand was already documented before anyone unlocked the new office door.
Source: https://www.livebitcoinnews.com/ripple-opened-a-new-dubai-hq-what-its-building-there-will-reshape-mea-payments/




