Ripple is expanding Ripple Payments into a single platform that lets businesses move money across fiat currencies and stablecoins, aiming to simplify global collections, custody, liquidity, and payouts.
Ripple announced a major expansion of Ripple Payments, positioning it as a unified platform for moving money across traditional finance rails and onchain rails. The company says businesses can now collect, hold, exchange, and pay out using both fiat currencies and stablecoins through a single interface.
Ripple’s message is simple: global payments are messy because companies often stitch together multiple vendors for collection accounts, custody solutions, conversion, and payout partners. Ripple Payments is now being pitched as the cleaner alternative, with one platform handling the full flow.
The updated platform includes:
Ripple said this expansion is supported by capabilities gained through its acquisitions of Palisade and Rail, which brought in custody and treasury automation on one side, and virtual accounts and collections on the other.
Ripple President Monica Long framed the move as a response to what fintechs and financial institutions actually need to scale stablecoin payments in regulated markets.
Monica Long, President at Ripple said:
Ripple also emphasized its regulatory posture, pointing to enterprise grade compliance, a portfolio of more than 75 global licenses, and operating under New York Department of Financial Services oversight through a trust company charter. The company’s pitch is that regulated scale is where many stablecoin efforts stall, and licensing plus liquidity is what turns pilots into production.
Ripple said Ripple Payments is already live across more than 60 markets and has processed upwards of $100 billion in transaction volume. It also named existing customers and partners including AMINA Bank, Banco Genial, Corpay, and MassPay.
The company also highlighted newer and expanding use cases from fintechs and institutions using stablecoins to solve cross border liquidity and settlement issues, including:
Ripple is effectively betting that these operational wins, plus the ability to run everything through one provider, will be more persuasive than another round of pilot programs.
Ripple Labs built Ripple Payments for fast, low cost institutional transfers using the XRP Ledger, with XRP used as a bridge asset for near real time settlement. While the product expansion focuses heavily on stablecoins and fiat workflows, Ripple’s broader ecosystem still ties back to XRP Ledger based settlement and liquidity routes.
I see this as Ripple making a very direct play for the part of the market that actually pays the bills: regulated enterprise flows. In my experience, most payment stacks fail not because the tech is weak, but because the operational pieces are scattered across too many providers, with compliance and liquidity handled as afterthoughts. Ripple is trying to bundle the boring but critical parts, custody, collections, licensing, and liquidity, into one place. If they can keep onboarding simple and keep liquidity deep across corridors, this becomes less about crypto hype and more about real infrastructure that financial institutions can actually deploy.
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