Ripple has secured conditional approval from the U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) to establish a national trust bank. This approval, issued on Friday, puts the firm one step closer to launching a federally supervised financial institution.
The OCC also granted similar preliminary approvals to Circle, BitGo, Paxos, and Fidelity Digital Assets to transition from state-chartered trust banks to national charters.
Ripple filed its application for a national charter in July. At the time, the odds seemed low, as crypto firms have consistently struggled to obtain these licenses. The OCC’s decision signals a major shift in how regulators are responding to digital asset firms that seek formal integration into the banking system.
Ripple’s charter, once finalized, will authorize the company to hold and manage assets for customers, and to process payments more quickly than traditional methods allow. However, the charter will not permit Ripple or the other approved firms to accept deposits or issue loans.
This conditional approval also places its RLUSD stablecoin under direct oversight of both federal and state regulators. While the OCC will handle federal supervision, the New York Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) will continue its role on the state level.
CEO Brad Garlinghouse emphasized this structure, describing it as the most stringent compliance framework available in the United States. Garlinghouse said,
Ripple’s move puts it in the same compliance space as traditional financial institutions, contradicting long-standing claims that crypto firms resist regulation. This step is part of a broader effort to meet the same obligations as federally regulated banks, including rules around consumer protection and operational transparency.
Brad Garlinghouse also took the opportunity to push back against critics from traditional banking circles. He accused lobbyists of attempting to limit competition by misrepresenting how crypto companies operate. According to Garlinghouse, firms like Ripple are proving that compliance and innovation can coexist under formal supervision.
He challenged critics directly by questioning,
Currently, Anchorage Digital remains the only digital asset firm with a fully approved national trust bank charter. The OCC, which supervises 60 national trust banks, has signaled interest in opening the sector to more players. Comptroller of the Currency Jonathan Gould stated,
Before Ripple National Trust Bank can officially begin operations, the OCC must still grant final approval. If that happens, Ripple will join a short list of crypto firms allowed to serve clients nationwide under a federal banking framework.
]]>

