Ripple has received preliminary approval for a Crypto Asset Service Provider licence from Luxembourg’s financial regulator, opening the door to full-scale regulated payments services across all 30 countries of the European Economic Area.
It is one of the most significant regulatory wins in the company’s history. And within hours, a familiar question was back on social media: what does any of this mean for XRP holders?
What Ripple Just Achieved
The green light letter from Luxembourg’s CSSF, issued under the EU’s Markets in Crypto Assets regulation, allows Ripple to offer its complete cryptoasset and stablecoin payments infrastructure to banks, fintechs and corporates across Europe through a single integration.
Combined with its existing EU Electronic Money Institution licence, European financial institutions can now access Ripple’s collect, exchange and payout services under one unified regulatory roof for the first time.
Also Read : XRP News: Why July 1 Is a Make or Break Date for Ripple in California
The Question Retail Holders Are Asking
The celebration was not universal. XRP community members voiced a frustration shared widely across retail holders.
They also criticized Ripple’s push to promote RLUSD and the stablecoin sandwich solution to cross-border payments.
The concern is important because Ripple’s institutional expansion is real and accelerating. But if cross-border payment flows route primarily through RLUSD rather than XRP, retail holders may find themselves adjacent to the growth rather than central to it.
Ripple maintains that XRP and RLUSD are complementary, with XRP serving as a bridge asset where stablecoins cannot.
How much European payment volume ultimately flows through XRP versus RLUSD is the question that matters most to retail holders, and it remains unanswered.








