Ripple Receives MiCA CASP Approval in Luxembourg

Ripple announced on July 6, 2026 that Luxembourg's Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier (CSSF) has authorized its Crypto Asset Service Provider license under the Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) framework, making the company fully MiCA-compliant across all 30 European Economic Area countries.

What Ripple's MiCA CASP approval in Luxembourg means

The authorization upgrades Ripple's earlier preliminary MiCA status to a full CASP license. Ripple had received preliminary approval on June 23, 2026, and the CSSF's final sign-off now clears the company to offer regulated crypto-asset services across the entire EEA. For related coverage, see Ripple Receives EU CASP License From Luxembourg's CSSF.

MiCA, the EU's comprehensive crypto regulatory framework, requires firms to obtain CASP authorization before providing services such as custody, exchange, or portfolio management involving crypto assets. The CSSF confirmed that the MiCA transition period for virtual asset service providers ended on July 1, 2026, meaning unauthorized providers can no longer offer crypto services in the EU and may only facilitate orderly customer exits. For related coverage, see Ripple President Monica Long to Speak at XRP Seoul 2026.

Ripple's timing is notable. By securing full authorization days after the transition deadline, the company can operate without interruption while competitors that missed the cutoff face restrictions. This positions Ripple alongside the 244 crypto firms authorized across the EEA ahead of the deadline.

The CASP license complements the full Electronic Money Institution (EMI) approval that Ripple received from the CSSF on February 2, 2026. Together, the two authorizations give Ripple a dual regulatory foundation for its payments infrastructure in Europe.

Ripple said the MiCA authorization adds to a global regulatory footprint spanning more than 75 licenses, registrations, and approvals worldwide.

Why the approval matters for Ripple's EU crypto operations

Cassie Craddock, a Ripple executive, said the company "enters the post-transitional MiCA era fully compliant and ready to scale."

"Ripple enters the post-transitional MiCA era fully compliant and ready to scale."

— Cassie Craddock, Ripple

A single CASP authorization in one EU member state allows a firm to passport its services across all 30 EEA countries. For Ripple, Luxembourg serves as the gateway to offer its end-to-end regulated crypto payments product continent-wide without needing separate national licenses.

Ripple Payments has already processed more than $100 billion in volume across 60-plus markets globally. The MiCA license opens a path to expand that footprint within Europe's regulated corridor, where firms like Binance have faced restrictions after failing to meet the same deadline.

What this says about MiCA's role in shaping crypto competition

The July 1, 2026 transition deadline created a hard dividing line in European crypto markets. Firms with CASP authorization can operate freely; those without it cannot. The CSSF's enforcement stance, requiring unlicensed providers to wind down rather than continue serving customers, underscores the framework's teeth.

For Ripple, the approval reinforces a regulatory-first strategy that contrasts with competitors still navigating compliance in multiple jurisdictions. The company's combined EMI and CASP status in Luxembourg gives it a broader operational mandate than firms holding only one of the two authorizations.

XRP was trading near US$1.14 around publication, up about 0.88% over 24 hours, as the broader crypto market remained in a risk-off posture with the Fear & Greed Index at 24.

MiCA is increasingly functioning as a competitive filter, separating licensed operators from those forced to exit the European market. Ripple's full compliance, secured within days of the transition deadline, positions it among the early movers in what is now the world's most comprehensive crypto regulatory regime.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.