Ripple has received full Crypto Asset Service Provider authorization from Luxembourg’s Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier. Summary Ripple’s Luxembourg approval lets it offer regu
Ripple has received full Crypto Asset Service Provider authorization from Luxembourg’s Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier.
Summary
- Ripple’s Luxembourg approval lets it offer regulated crypto payment services across the European Economic Area.
- The CASP license pairs with Ripple’s EMI license, supporting cryptoasset and stablecoin payment infrastructure.
- MiCA’s July deadline has split Europe’s crypto market between licensed and restricted service providers.
The approval completes its Markets in Crypto-Assets requirements and allows the company to offer regulated cryptoasset services across the European Economic Area.
The authorization follows Ripple’s earlier preliminary MiCA approval in Luxembourg. That step gave Ripple a path to full compliance before the end of the EU’s transition period.
You might also like: BitTorrent unveils long term BTT buyback and burn program for Q3 2026
Ripple said the full approval makes its regulated crypto payments product available to financial institutions, corporates, and businesses across all 30 EEA countries. The company said the license adds to its global portfolio of more than 75 regulatory licenses.
“This CASP authorisation means Ripple enters the post-transitional MiCA era fully compliant and ready to scale,” said Cassie Craddock, Ripple’s managing director for the U.K. and Europe.
CASP license supports regulated crypto payments
The new approval gives Ripple a clearer legal base for Ripple Payments in Europe. The product supports cryptoasset and stablecoin payment flows for banks, fintech firms, and corporate clients.
As crypto.news previously reported, Ripple’s CASP and EMI approvals would support cryptoasset and stablecoin payments infrastructure across Europe. The setup allows clients to handle collection, exchange, and payout services through a regulated route.
The license does not change XRP holder rights by itself. It is mainly a business authorization for Ripple’s regulated services in Europe. Even so, the approval may matter to market watchers because it expands Ripple’s role in compliant crypto payment infrastructure.
“The institutions we work with across Europe are looking to build their digital assets services alongside regulated partners, and Ripple is licensed and ready to meet that demand,” said Craddock.
MiCA deadline reshapes Europe’s crypto market
Ripple’s approval comes just after the end of MiCA’s transition period. The MiCA transition ended on July 1, requiring crypto firms to hold CASP licenses to keep serving users under the new EU rulebook.
MiCA gives licensed firms a passporting route across the bloc. A company approved in one member state can offer covered crypto services in other EU and EEA markets without separate national approvals.
The rule change has already separated approved firms from firms still waiting for authorization. As crypto.news reported, ESMA added 57 new MiCA firms to its register after the deadline, raising the total number of authorized crypto firms to 300.
Standard Chartered and FalconX were among the firms added to the register. Standard Chartered also received authorization through Luxembourg, showing the country’s growing role as a base for institutional crypto services.
Luxembourg strengthens its MiCA role
Luxembourg has become one of Europe’s main routes for crypto firms seeking market access under MiCA. Crypto.news reported that Coinbase opened a Luxembourg MiCA hub before the deadline, giving it a single route to serve European users.
Other firms have also used Luxembourg for regulated crypto expansion. B2C2 won MiCA approval in the country to offer crypto trading services across Europe.
Ripple now joins a smaller group of digital asset firms with full MiCA authorization. The approval strengthens its European licensing base at a time when unlicensed platforms face service limits.
The decision gives Ripple a stronger position as European banks and companies review crypto payment providers. Under MiCA, licensed firms can operate with a clearer rulebook, while firms without approval must limit or stop covered services in the region.
Read more: XRP price coils below $1.20 as ETF inflows build