The San Francisco-based blockchain firm says the expanded Ripple Payments platform lets businesses collect, convert, custody, and pay out funds through one interface, eliminating the need for separate providers to handle bank transfers and blockchain rails. It’s a practical pitch aimed squarely at financial institutions and fintechs still juggling multiple third-party systems to move money globally.
The core proposition is straightforward: businesses can now accept both fiat and stablecoin payments through named virtual accounts and wallets, have those assets automatically converted and settled into a single operational account, and tap into liquidity across markets without stitching together disparate tools.
The infrastructure pulls from several acquisitions Ripple has made over the past two years. Technology from its Rail acquisition powers the virtual account and automated collection layer. Custody infrastructure comes courtesy of Palisade, which Ripple picked up in 2025, providing wallet provisioning and high-speed transaction signing at scale.
At the center of it all sits RLUSD — Ripple’s own dollar-backed stablecoin — functioning as the connective tissue between fiat and digital rails.
RLUSD is not a peripheral product here. It is technically engineered for institutional use: fully collateralized by U.S. dollar deposits, short-term Treasuries, and cash equivalents, with monthly reserve attestations conducted by firms including Deloitte. The stablecoin is natively issued on both the XRP Ledger — where transactions settle in roughly three to five seconds at minimal cost — and Ethereum, giving it access to DeFi liquidity pools.
As of early 2026, circulating supply has crossed 1 billion tokens. The token also carries programmable compliance features, including the ability to freeze addresses flagged for sanctions or fraudulent activity — a detail that matters considerably when pitching to regulated institutions.
Ripple’s regulatory posture has been methodical. The company now holds over 75 global licenses, and recent months have seen it lock down authorizations in key jurisdictions:
United States: Operates under an NYDFS Limited Purpose Trust Company Charter through Standard Custody & Trust Company. In late 2025, it also received conditional OCC approval for a National Trust Bank charter.
European Union: Secured a full Electronic Money Institution license from Luxembourg’s CSSF in February 2026, granting it passporting rights across all 30 EEA countries under MiCA.
United Kingdom: Finalized both an EMI license and Cryptoasset Registration from the FCA in January 2026.
Other markets: Holds authorizations in Singapore, Dubai, Australia, Brazil, and Switzerland, among others.
The licensing push is not incidental. It underpins Ripple’s core argument to institutional clients — that it can operate compliantly across jurisdictions where many crypto-native firms still cannot.
The platform is currently live in over 60 markets and has processed more than $100 billion in total volume. Those numbers lend credibility to what could otherwise read as an ambitious but untested product pitch.
The broader context is a payments industry increasingly under pressure to modernize cross-border infrastructure that, in many corridors, still relies on correspondent banking relationships built decades ago. Ripple is positioning itself as the shortcut — a turnkey layer that handles the complexity of moving money across fiat and digital rails without requiring clients to build or manage that complexity themselves.
Whether institutions bite at scale remains to be seen. But the infrastructure, at least on paper, is now assembled.
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