XRPL’s Permissioned DEX (XLS-81) launches February 18, bringing credential-gated trading pools to DeFi compliance. A protocol shift no one saw coming.
The XRP Ledger just got a structural overhaul. Two protocol amendments now change how trading, settlement, and access control work, all protocol-native, no custom contracts needed.
Token Escrow (XLS-85) went live on February 12. Now, any token, not just XRP, can be locked with programmable conditions. Time-based releases, milestone triggers, and multi-party approvals are all baked into the ledger itself.
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The Gate Is Opening, And Not Everyone Gets In
The Permissioned DEX amendment (XLS-81) goes liveon February 18. As XRPL Commons posted on X, this creates controlled trading environments inside XRPL’s native DEX. Three offer types exist now: Open, Permissioned, and Hybrid.
Open offers work exactly as before. Permissioned offers need credentials to place or accept a trade. Hybrid offers tap the private pool first, then falls back to the open DEX when needed.
XRPL Commons tested both amendments end-to-end on Devnet. Their report confirmed full compatibility across token types and trade flows. The infrastructure, they said in the post, is live; builders can start now.
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According to XRPL Commons on X, the Permissioned DEX runs on top of two earlier amendments — XLS-70 (Credentials) and XLS-80 (Permissioned Domains). Credentials prove user attributes without exposing personal data. Domain operators set who gets access and when.
The open DEX keeps running. Unchanged. Nothing gets taken away.
Why Regulated Finance Was Waiting for This Moment
Regulated institutions face a real problem with open DEX trading. No counterparty verification. No compliance controls. Sanctions rules make anonymous trading legally risky.
According to XRPL’s official documentation at xrpl.org, permissioned DEXes let regulated businesses trade on-chain while confirming counterparties have been properly vetted. Each permissioned DEX is tied to a domain, acting as an access list. Trades only match within the same domain.
That changes everything for B2B payments. Invoice settlement can now happen conditionally with verified counterparties in isolated pools. Cross-border FX conversion still taps the open DEX through hybrid offers.
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The escrow piece matters here, too. Lock stablecoin liquidity with a time condition. Issue credentials to verified partners. Open a permissioned pool for regional compliance zones. When transaction volume hits a threshold, liquidity unlocks automatically. Then switch to hybrid, partners access the private pool or tap the open DEX for FX. One ledger. No off-chain coordination.
Treasury teams get jurisdiction-specific trading zones. Token launches get whitelist phases before public markets. Gaming guilds trade privately before cross-game markets open. Creator platforms lock royalty splits in escrow and run credential-gated collector sales before public listing.
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Credential Rules, and What Can Break Them
One thing the docs make clear: permissioned offers go invalid if credentials expire. Or if the domain owner changes the accepted credential list. Or if the domain gets deleted entirely. Invalid offers get cleaned out automatically when a transaction touches that order book.
That means domain owners carry real power here. A compromised or unreliable domain operator puts the entire permissioned pool at risk. Traders inside a domain are only as protected as the issuer behind their credentials.
Permissioned DEXes are also not compatible with Automated Market Makers. AMMs can’t fill permissioned or payment-restricted offers. A hybrid offer can mix permissioned and open DEX, but no transaction can pull from two different permissioned DEXes at once.
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Reserves cost 0.2 XRP per escrowed asset. No clawback during the lock period. Technical specs for both amendments are publicly available, XLS-85 and XLS-81, and Devnet testing is open at tests.xrpl-commons.org/permissionedDEXes.
The pattern across every use case is the same: lock → control access → automate release → bridge to open markets. As XRPL Commons said in the post, all protocol-native. No custom contracts anywhere.
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Source: https://www.livebitcoinnews.com/xrpls-permissioned-dex-goes-live-defi-will-never-be-the-same/


