Ripple has
won preliminary approval from Luxembourg’s financial regulator to operate as a
crypto-asset service provider across the European Union, a step that still
leaves the firm short of a full license.
The
Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier issued what Ripple called a
green light letter, an early-stage sign-off that remains subject to final
conditions before the company can scale regulated services in the bloc.
The
permission, once finalized, would let Ripple offer cryptoasset services to
banks, fintechs and corporate clients in all 30 countries of the European
Economic Area.
It builds
on an electronic money institution license the company already holds in
Luxembourg, which together with the crypto permission would make Ripple
compliant with the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets regime, the firm said.
More licensing momentum!
Ripple has secured its preliminary Crypto Asset Service Provider (CASP) license in Luxembourg, paving the way for the full rollout of Ripple Payments across the EEA and full MiCA compliance: https://t.co/APQcYnCy9c
The next wave of regulated digital…
— Ripple (@Ripple) June 23, 2026
That
mirrors the path Ripple took in Britain, where it secured an EMI registration and
crypto-asset listing from the Financial Conduct Authority in January, though that approval arrived with
sharp limits on who the company could serve.
Approval Comes With
Conditions Attached
A green
light letter under MiCA signals that a regulator intends to authorize a firm,
but it is not the authorization itself.
Ripple
still has to meet final conditions set by the CSSF before the CASP license is
granted, and the company did not detail what those conditions are or when it
expects to clear them.
For now,
the letter does not expand what Ripple can do in Europe. The firm said the
combined CASP and EMI setup would eventually let European clients collect,
exchange and pay out through a single integration, handling both cryptoasset
and stablecoin payments.
Ripple pointed to Europe as one of its larger
markets, with customers that include some of the region’s biggest financial
institutions, though it did not name them.
Cassie Craddock, Ripple’s managing director for Europe
“MiCA
has helped to unlock a new wave of institutional digital assets adoption,”
said Cassie Craddock, managing director for the UK and Europe at Ripple.
The company
said demand for regulated digital asset infrastructure has been picking up as
banks move settlement, collateral and cross-border payments onto blockchain
rails.
Rivals Already Cleared the
Full MiCA Bar
Ripple is
reaching the European starting line behind firms that already hold the full
permission it is still chasing. Virtu Financial’s Irish unit picked up a complete MiCA approval
and CASP license at the start of June, clearing it to provide crypto services to
professional clients across the 27 EU states.
Exchanges
moved earlier still. Kraken switched on services across all 30
EEA countries under its MiCA license last August, while Coinbase and Bitstamp won
their authorizations through Luxembourg, and Crypto.com and OKX went through
Malta.
That leaves
Ripple, a payments and infrastructure company rather than a retail exchange,
trying to carve out a different position around stablecoin settlement and
corporate money movement.
The timing
matters. A transitional window under MiCA closes on July 1, after which any
crypto-asset service provider operating without full authorization in the EU
must stop or face enforcement. That deadline has pushed a wave of
brokers and crypto firms to lock in licenses before the cut-off, crowding the queue at
national regulators.
A Payments Arm Leaning
Harder on Europe
The
European push fits a company that has spent the past year buying and licensing
its way deeper into payments.
Ripple agreed to acquire stablecoin
payments firm Rail for $200 million last summer, adding virtual accounts and
banking connections to a network it says has processed more than $100 billion
in volume across over 60 markets.
Those
figures come from the company and have not been independently verified. Ripple
also says it holds more than 75 regulatory licenses worldwide, up from the
60-plus it reported a year ago, a count it uses to argue it is among the most
licensed crypto firms in operation.
Matthew Osborne, the company’s UK and Europe head of policy
The
infrastructure runs on Ripple’s dollar-pegged stablecoin , RLUSD, and the XRP
token. Matthew Osborne, the company’s UK and Europe head of policy, credited
the Luxembourg regulator for its handling of the application.
“We’re
grateful to the CSSF for its constructive approach throughout the licensing
process,” he said, describing the country as a natural base for Ripple’s
European operations.
Whether the
green light converts into a full license, and how quickly, will decide if
Ripple can compete for European business before the July deadline reshapes the
market.
Ripple has
won preliminary approval from Luxembourg’s financial regulator to operate as a
crypto-asset service provider across the European Union, a step that still
leaves the firm short of a full license.
The
Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier issued what Ripple called a
green light letter, an early-stage sign-off that remains subject to final
conditions before the company can scale regulated services in the bloc.
The
permission, once finalized, would let Ripple offer cryptoasset services to
banks, fintechs and corporate clients in all 30 countries of the European
Economic Area.
It builds
on an electronic money institution license the company already holds in
Luxembourg, which together with the crypto permission would make Ripple
compliant with the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets regime, the firm said.
More licensing momentum!
Ripple has secured its preliminary Crypto Asset Service Provider (CASP) license in Luxembourg, paving the way for the full rollout of Ripple Payments across the EEA and full MiCA compliance: https://t.co/APQcYnCy9c
The next wave of regulated digital…
— Ripple (@Ripple) June 23, 2026
That
mirrors the path Ripple took in Britain, where it secured an EMI registration and
crypto-asset listing from the Financial Conduct Authority in January, though that approval arrived with
sharp limits on who the company could serve.
Approval Comes With
Conditions Attached
A green
light letter under MiCA signals that a regulator intends to authorize a firm,
but it is not the authorization itself.
Ripple
still has to meet final conditions set by the CSSF before the CASP license is
granted, and the company did not detail what those conditions are or when it
expects to clear them.
For now,
the letter does not expand what Ripple can do in Europe. The firm said the
combined CASP and EMI setup would eventually let European clients collect,
exchange and pay out through a single integration, handling both cryptoasset
and stablecoin payments.
Ripple pointed to Europe as one of its larger
markets, with customers that include some of the region’s biggest financial
institutions, though it did not name them.
Cassie Craddock, Ripple’s managing director for Europe
“MiCA
has helped to unlock a new wave of institutional digital assets adoption,”
said Cassie Craddock, managing director for the UK and Europe at Ripple.
The company
said demand for regulated digital asset infrastructure has been picking up as
banks move settlement, collateral and cross-border payments onto blockchain
rails.
Rivals Already Cleared the
Full MiCA Bar
Ripple is
reaching the European starting line behind firms that already hold the full
permission it is still chasing. Virtu Financial’s Irish unit picked up a complete MiCA approval
and CASP license at the start of June, clearing it to provide crypto services to
professional clients across the 27 EU states.
Exchanges
moved earlier still. Kraken switched on services across all 30
EEA countries under its MiCA license last August, while Coinbase and Bitstamp won
their authorizations through Luxembourg, and Crypto.com and OKX went through
Malta.
That leaves
Ripple, a payments and infrastructure company rather than a retail exchange,
trying to carve out a different position around stablecoin settlement and
corporate money movement.
The timing
matters. A transitional window under MiCA closes on July 1, after which any
crypto-asset service provider operating without full authorization in the EU
must stop or face enforcement. That deadline has pushed a wave of
brokers and crypto firms to lock in licenses before the cut-off, crowding the queue at
national regulators.
A Payments Arm Leaning
Harder on Europe
The
European push fits a company that has spent the past year buying and licensing
its way deeper into payments.
Ripple agreed to acquire stablecoin
payments firm Rail for $200 million last summer, adding virtual accounts and
banking connections to a network it says has processed more than $100 billion
in volume across over 60 markets.
Those
figures come from the company and have not been independently verified. Ripple
also says it holds more than 75 regulatory licenses worldwide, up from the
60-plus it reported a year ago, a count it uses to argue it is among the most
licensed crypto firms in operation.
Matthew Osborne, the company’s UK and Europe head of policy
The
infrastructure runs on Ripple’s dollar-pegged stablecoin , RLUSD, and the XRP
token. Matthew Osborne, the company’s UK and Europe head of policy, credited
the Luxembourg regulator for its handling of the application.
“We’re
grateful to the CSSF for its constructive approach throughout the licensing
process,” he said, describing the country as a natural base for Ripple’s
European operations.
Whether the
green light converts into a full license, and how quickly, will decide if
Ripple can compete for European business before the July deadline reshapes the
market.












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