Ripple Wins Preliminary MiCA CASP License in Luxembourg

Ripple Wins Preliminary MiCA CASP License in Luxembourg

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Ripple Wins Preliminary MiCA CASP License in Luxembourg
  • Ripple has received preliminary MiCA CASP approval from Luxembourg’s CSSF.
  • CASP and EMI licenses together let European firms access Ripple’s full stack.
  • Ripple platform has processed over $100 billion in volume across 60 markets.

Ripple has received preliminary approval for a Crypto Asset Service Provider (CASP) license from Luxembourg’s financial regulator, the CSSF, under the EU’s MiCA framework. The approval, issued as a Green Light Letter, is subject to final conditions but effectively clears the path for Ripple to operate regulated crypto services across all 30 countries in the European Economic Area.

What the License Unlocks

The CASP approval, combined with an EU Electronic Money Institution (EMI) license Ripple already holds in Luxembourg, means European banks, fintechs, and corporates can now access Ripple’s full payments stack through a single integration. That includes collecting, exchanging, and paying out across both crypto and stablecoin rails for the first time under one regulatory umbrella.

Cassie Craddock, Ripple’s Managing Director for the UK and Europe, said the shift in tone from European institutions has been significant. “Financial market infrastructure is moving onchain – from cross-border payments and settlement to collateral management and tokenised assets – and banks and fintechs are actively building the digital asset capabilities they need to remain competitive,” she said.

Ripple’s platform has processed over $100 billion in volume to date and operates across 60 markets globally. Europe is already one of its strongest regions by client concentration, with several large financial institutions already using its infrastructure.

Luxembourg as Regulatory Base

Matthew Osborne, Ripple’s UK and Europe Head of Policy, credited Luxembourg’s regulatory environment for making it a natural fit. “Luxembourg has established itself as a leading centre for financial services regulation in Europe, combining deep supervisory expertise with a clear, proportionate framework for digital assets,” he said.

The MiCA license follows Ripple’s receipt of an EMI license and crypto registration from the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority in January 2026. The company now holds more than 75 regulatory licences globally.

Community Split on Who Actually Benefits

Not everyone in the XRP community viewed the news as a win for token holders. A user argued that the expansion continues Ripple’s pattern of building out its own stablecoin and payments business, while retail XRP holders see little tangible benefit. “This does nothing once again for retail XRP holders,” he wrote, accusing Ripple of promoting RLUSD and its stablecoin-based cross-border solution at the expense of XRP utility.

Others took the opposite view and argued that MiCA clarity had already changed the conversation in European financial circles, framing the license as infrastructure that is now live and ready to absorb institutional demand at scale across the EEA.

The tension reflects a debate that has run through the XRP community for years: whether Ripple’s regulatory and commercial progress translates into meaningful demand for XRP itself, or primarily benefits the company’s own stablecoin and service revenue.

Related: Ripple’s 38B XRP Escrow Could Take 9 More Years to Fully Unlock

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