Ripple Lands MiCA License In Luxembourg To Serve All 30 EEA Countries
Ripple Secures Regulatory Foothold Across Europe @Ripple has received preliminary Crypto Asset Service Provider (CASP) approval from Luxembourg's financial regulator, the Commission de Survei
A
AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
June 23, 2026
2 min read
NEWS
CryptoCompass editorial visual for policy coverage.
Ripple Secures Regulatory Foothold Across Europe
@Ripple has received preliminary Crypto Asset Service Provider (CASP) approval from Luxembourg's financial regulator, the Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier (CSSF), under the EU's Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) framework. The Luxembourg license is particularly significant as it will enable Ripple to operate across all 30 countries in the European Economic Area under the EU's MiCA regulations.
Once it gains full authorisation, the license will allow Ripple to provide regulated payment services, including those involving stablecoins and digital assets, across the EU via passporting rules, which means it won't need separate approvals in each country. That makes it one of the broadest crypto authorisations granted under MiCA to date.
Ripple plans to use the Luxembourg hub for its planned US dollar stablecoin RLUSD and euro-linked payment routes.Under full EMI and CASP authorisations, Ripple expects to issue and redeem RLUSD for European clients under MiCA rules.
Part of a Broader Push for Regulatory Legitimacy
The Luxembourg approval does not stand alone. Ripple has received preliminary approval for an electronic money institution (EMI) license from Luxembourg's CSSF, marking its second major regulatory milestone in one week. The week prior, the payments company announced it had secured an EMI license and cryptoasset registration from the UK's Financial Conduct Authority.
Ripple now holds more than 75 licenses and registrations globally, with over $95 billion in volume processed while reaching 90% of daily FX markets.The firm aims to help banks, payment institutions and corporates move funds faster and at lower cost compared with many legacy cross-border payment systems.
The approval also resolves months of regulatory uncertainty, as concerns about multi-issuance stablecoins threatened to delay applications from companies seeking to issue the same stablecoin across multiple jurisdictions. With that hurdle cleared, Ripple's European expansion now appears to be on firm regulatory ground.
Another wave of panic has hit the crypto market. Bitcoin is falling, Ethereum is bleeding, and altcoins are rapidly losing momentum as traders rush to exit leveraged positions. More than $660
A bill stuck on the Senate calendar in Washington would set rules far past the United States border. The reason is the same one that made European privacy law a global standard, and the dolla
You can also read this news on BH NEWS: New US Legislation Halts FED’s Digital Dollar Ambitions Until 2030 In a significant legislative move, the US Senate recently approved the 21st Century