Ripple has secured full authorization under the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets [MiCA] framework. This completes the regulatory process needed to offer its crypto-asset services across the European Economic Area [EEA].
The approval comes days after the EU’s MiCA transition period ended on July 1, positioning Ripple among the firms entering the bloc’s post-transition regulatory regime with full compliance. The license enables the company to expand its regulated crypto payments offering across all 30 EEA countries.
Ripple completes MiCA approval process
Ripple said Luxembourg’s financial regulator, the Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier [CSSF], granted its Crypto-Asset Service Provider [CASP] authorization, following the preliminary approval the company announced in June.
The company said the license completes its MiCA requirements, allowing its regulated crypto payments product to serve financial institutions, corporates, and businesses throughout the European Economic Area under a single regulatory framework.
“This CASP authorisation means Ripple enters the post-transitional MiCA era fully compliant and ready to scale,” Cassie Craddock, Ripple’s Managing Director for the UK and Europe, said in the announcement.
She added that financial institutions across Europe are seeking regulated partners as they expand their digital asset services.
Approval strengthens Ripple’s European expansion
The authorization follows the end of MiCA’s transitional period on July 1, when crypto-asset service providers across the EU were expected to operate under the bloc’s harmonized licensing regime.
Under MiCA, authorized firms can passport regulated crypto services across EEA member states. It replaces the fragmented system of national registrations that previously governed the market.
Ripple said the CASP license complements its existing Electronic Money Institution [EMI] license in the EU. This makes it one of a small group of digital asset firms with full MiCA authorization. The company added that the approval expands its portfolio to more than 75 regulatory licenses worldwide.
Regulation remains central to Ripple’s strategy
The approval reinforces Ripple’s long-standing strategy of expanding through regulatory approvals as it grows its enterprise payments business.
Ripple’s payments, custody, liquidity, and treasury management services are built around XRP and its U.S. dollar-pegged stablecoin, RLUSD. The company is increasingly targeting financial institutions seeking regulated blockchain infrastructure.
The latest approval also reflects the industry’s broader shift towards MiCA compliance as crypto firms seek access to the European market under a unified regulatory framework.
Final Summary
- Ripple has received full MiCA CASP authorization from the CSSF in Luxembourg, enabling it to offer regulated crypto services across all 30 EEA countries.
- The approval comes days after MiCA’s transition period ended, positioning Ripple among the firms operating under the EU’s new harmonized crypto licensing regime.






