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06/23 07:44

Ripple nears full MiCA compliance after Luxembourg CASP approval

Ripple has received preliminary approval for a Crypto Asset Service Provider license from Luxembourg’s Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier under the European Union’s Markets in Crypto Assets regulation. 






Summary






Ripple received preliminary MiCA CASP approval from Luxembourg’s CSSF, subject to final conditions and review.



The license would let Ripple Payments serve regulated banks and fintechs across 30 EEA countries.



Ripple says CASP and EMI approvals will support cryptoasset and stablecoin payments infrastructure across Europe.








According to a Tuesday press release, the approval came through a “Green Light Letter” and remains subject to final conditions.



The company said the license would allow it to scale regulated cryptoasset services for financial institutions and businesses across all 30 countries in the European Economic Area. Full approval would also place Ripple closer to a wider European rollout of its payments and stablecoin infrastructure under MiCA.




More licensing momentum! Ripple has secured its preliminary Crypto Asset Service Provider (CASP) license in Luxembourg, paving the way for the full rollout of Ripple Payments across the EEA and full MiCA compliance: https://t.co/APQcYnCy9cThe next wave of regulated digital…— Ripple (@Ripple) June 23, 2026













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CASP license strengthens Ripple Payments access



Ripple said the CASP license would work alongside its existing European Electronic Money Institution license. Together, the two approvals would let banks, fintechs and corporates use Ripple’s cryptoasset and stablecoin payments tools through one regulated integration.



The service would cover collection, exchange and payout functions. Ripple Payments has processed more than $100 billion in volume and operates across more than 60 markets, according to the company. That record gives Ripple a tested base as it seeks broader European approval.



Cassie Craddock, Ripple’s managing director for the UK and Europe, said “MiCA has helped to unlock a new wave of institutional digital assets adoption.” She added that “Financial market infrastructure is moving onchain,” citing cross-border payments, settlement, collateral management and tokenized assets.




We have preliminary approval of our CASP license 🎉 Once fully approved, European banks, FIs and fintechs will be able to access our end-to-end cryptoasset and stablecoin payments infrastructure through a single regulated integration. The next wave of institutional digital asset…— Cassie Craddock (@CraddockCJ) June 23, 2026




Europe becomes a key licensing market



The approval comes as crypto firms adjust to Europe’s MiCA rulebook. The framework gives firms a path to serve clients across the bloc through a national regulator, then use passporting rules to reach other markets.



Luxembourg has drawn more digital asset firms because of its role in European finance and its CSSF oversight model. Ripple said the regulator’s approach made the country a natural base for its European operations.



As previously reported by crypto.news, MiCA licensing has become a main focus for crypto firms seeking European access. A recent review of ESMA data found 204 authorized CASPs in a May 22 snapshot, with Luxembourg listed among institutional markets.



The broader market is also moving toward regulated stablecoin and cryptoasset services. As crypto.news earlier reported, Zodia Custody secured a Luxembourg Payment Institution license to support stablecoin custody and transfer services across the EU.



Ripple expands its regulated footprint



Ripple said full CASP approval, combined with its EMI license, would make the company fully MiCA-compliant. The company also said it received an EMI license and Cryptoasset Registration from the United Kingdom’s Financial Conduct Authority in January.



The firm now holds more than 75 regulatory licenses globally. Its European push follows a wider effort to build regulated services for banks and businesses that want digital asset payment tools.



crypto.news earlier reported that Ripple’s 2026 wins have strengthened the company’s regulated business, while XRP token demand remains a separate market question. The latest Luxembourg approval fits that split. It relates to Ripple’s payment infrastructure, not a direct change to XRP holders’ rights.



The approval does not remove all remaining steps. Ripple must still meet final conditions before it can use the license across the EEA. If completed, the authorization would give Ripple a regulated route to offer cryptoasset and stablecoin payment services in Europe under a single framework.












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