The XRP Ledger (XRPL) has activated six upgrades since February 2024 to address compliance barriers in tokenization. These updates target institutional requirements for identity, asset control, and regulated trading. As a result, industry data shows the XRPL now leads tokenized commodity growth in 2026.
Over the past two years, developers introduced protocol-level features that support regulated real-world asset issuance. Institutions often cite compliance risks as the main barrier to blockchain adoption. However, recent upgrades aim to resolve those operational and legal concerns directly on-chain.
The XRPL activated the Clawback feature in February 2024 to let issuers retrieve or freeze tokens when required. This function allows institutions to act during fraud investigations or sanctions enforcement. As a result, issuers can manage assets without deploying custom smart contracts.
In October 2024, the network enabled Decentralized Identifiers to support on-chain identity management. DIDs allow users to control verified identities while institutions enforce Know Your Customer standards. Later, in September 2025, the XRPL introduced Credentials to manage authorization requirements directly on the ledger.
Jake Claver, CEO of Digital Ascension Group, addressed these changes in a recent post on X. He said, “Compliance has always been the single biggest obstacle keeping trillions off blockchain rails.” He added that many institutions encounter legal questions within six months of launching tokenization pilots.
Claver stated that legal teams often ask how to freeze assets or recover funds from compromised wallets. He argued that EVM-based chains lack built-in answers to these compliance questions. Consequently, banks often hire developers to build custom compliance layers at high cost.
He estimated that audit fees alone can exceed $500,000 for these frameworks. He also said that development timelines often stretch to six months. According to Claver, many projects stall when compliance risks increase operational capital requirements.
The XRPL launched the Multi-Purpose Token standard in October 2025 to support native real-world asset issuance. MPTs include deep freeze and clawback features within the protocol itself. Therefore, issuers can sanction holders or recover funds without external contracts.
MPTs also support metadata fields compatible with the Actus standard for financial contracts. These fields store machine-readable terms such as maturity dates and coupon rates. Consequently, risk systems can process token data automatically without manual reconciliation.
In February 2026, the XRPL activated Permissioned Domains to support private compliant environments. These domains allow institutions to restrict participation to verified users. During the same month, the network launched the Permissioned DEX for regulated trading venues.
Claver said identity verification integrates with DIDs and Credentials on the ledger. He explained that issuers can limit transactions to holders who have completed KYC checks. He also stated that MPT transactions burn XRP, while new issuances hold XRP as reserve.
Network performance also remains central to institutional adoption efforts. The XRPL settles transactions within three to five seconds. Fees remain under $0.01 per transaction and are paid in XRP.
Industry data shows the XRPL accounted for $1.029 billion of the $3.4 billion tokenized commodity growth in 2026. This figure represents nearly one-third of the total market expansion. The network now hosts around $2 billion in total real-world assets.
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