Ripple RLUSD · Bank-Grade Compliance-First Stablecoin · XRPL + Ethereum 2 -Chain
Wiki route
This entry sits under fintech index. Read it with Japan financial regulation: legal architecture for tokens, crypto-assets, and payments for adjacent context and Japan stablecoin regulatory landscape: the JPYC / USDC / Project Pax three-layer structure for the broader system boundary.
[!info] TL;DR Ripple RLUSD launched simultaneously on XRPL + Ethereum as a 2 -chain launch in 2024-12-17, issued by Standard Custody (a Ripple subsidiary with a NY DFS trust license), and positioned as a bank-grade compliance-first product. As of 2026-05 its market cap is $700M+, with a goal of surpassing $3B in 2027 年. RLUSD is the key product that completes Ripple’s evolution from “cross-border payments software” to an “end-to-end settlement stack” (RLUSD + ODL + XRPL DEX + RippleNet). Under the GENIUS Act framework, it is the archetype of “compliance first, growth second.”
Key facts
- MCap $700M+ (2026-05) · simultaneous launch on 2 chains 2024-12-17
- Issuer: Standard Custody (Ripple subsidiary; NY DFS Trust license obtained in 2024-04 ; ex-Anchorage team)
- Reserves: 100% UST (1-3M) + cash; monthly attestation by BDO USA
- Main exchanges: Bitstamp / Bitso / Independent Reserve / Uphold
- Relation to XRPL: native asset · native DEX support · IOU model
- Relation to ODL: from 2025-Q2 RLUSD replaced the XRP bridge in some ODL corridors
- 2026-Q1 Ripple applied for an OCC National Bank Charter; the application status remained subject to subsequent regulatory review.
Mechanism / How it works
The core differentiation of RLUSD versus USDC/USDT is that it does not pursue DeFi liquidity depth (USDC’s strength) and does not pursue gray-zone circulation scale (USDT’s strength), but instead focuses on institutional cross-border payment settlement. Ripple layers ODL (launched in 2018 ) + the native XRPL DEX (2018) + the RippleNet banking network (200+ banks). This completes Ripple’s evolutionary path from software layer to liquidity layer to stablecoin layer to a fully closed loop: a cross-border bank uses the RippleNet messaging layer, RLUSD replaces the XRP bridge in the ODL channel, settlement occurs on XRPL in sub-3-second time, and the receiving bank redeems into local currency. The full settlement stack is tighter than USDC + SWIFT because the issuer, bridge asset, DEX, and bank messaging are all inside the Ripple group. It is a different tactical approach on the same battlefield as stablecoin cross-border settlement via SWIFT API.
Origin & evolution
2012-2018 software layer (RippleNet · 200+ banks). From 2018 onward, liquidity layer (ODL using XRP as the bridge). 2020-2023 lawsuit with the SEC (whether XRP is a security). 2023-07 court ruling that XRP is not a security on public exchanges. 2024-04 acquisition of Standard Custody (NY DFS Trust license). 2024-12-17 simultaneous launch of RLUSD on XRPL + Ethereum. In 2025-Q3 RLUSD entered Bitstamp (an exchange acquired by Robinhood), greatly expanding retail touchpoints. In 2026-Q1 Ripple applied for an OCC National Bank Charter, following the OCC trust-bank federal stablecoin arbitrage route. Together with Stripe Tempo protocol hedge strategy / Coinbase Arc it forms a mirror-image tripod: Ripple = “cross-border compliant settlement” / Stripe = “e-commerce payments” / Coinbase = “DeFi liquidity.”
Related
- Wiki Index
- PayPal PYUSD
- stablecoin cross-border settlement via SWIFT API
- three-circle stablecoin MRA framework
- stablecoin cross-border B2B growth
- Wall Street crypto-asset network neutrality