---
title: "Ripple Wins Full MiCA CASP License in Luxembourg"
date: 2026-07-06
author: "Kelvin Scott"
featured_image: "https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/07/ripple-wins-full-mica-casp-license-in-luxembourg.jpg"
categories:
  - name: "Compliance"
    url: "/compliance.md"
tags:
  - name: "News"
    url: "/tag/news.md"
---

# Ripple Wins Full MiCA CASP License in Luxembourg

Ripplesaid on July 6, 2026, that it received full Crypto-Asset Service Provider authorisation from Luxembourg’s financial regulator, the CSSF. The upgrade confirms Ripple’s full compliance with MiCA requirements across all 30 countries of the European Economic Area.

## Key Takeaways

- Ripple secured full MiCA CASP authorisation from Luxembourg’s CSSF, upgrading the preliminary approval it held since June 2026.
- The license covers all 30 countries of the European Economic Area, not Luxembourg alone.
- Full authorisation requires meeting Article 63 MiCAR’s prudential and organisational requirements (, a higher bar than the preliminary stage.
- Ripple now holds full MiCA authorisation alongside its existing EU e-money institution (EMI) license, a combination few digital-asset firms in Europe hold.
- Ripple holds more than 75 regulatory licenses globally, and its product lineup includes the stablecoin RLUSD and the cryptocurrency XRP.

## What Happened?

The CSSF (Luxembourg’s Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier, the country’s financial regulator) granted Ripple full CASP authorisation, following the preliminary approval Ripple announced in June 2026, per Ripple. The upgrade means Ripple’s regulated crypto payments product is now available to financial institutions, corporates, and businesses throughout the EEA, the kind of institutional-grade access as regulated platforms compete for bank and corporate clients, according to Ripple.

This CASP authorisation means Ripple enters the post-transitional MiCA era fully compliant and ready to scale, said **Cassie Craddock**, Managing Director, UK &amp; Europe at Ripple.

> It’s official: Ripple has received its EU CASP license. We are now fully MiCA-compliant and ready to meet growing European crypto demand <https://t.co/I9GRgvfGzH>
> 
> — Ripple (@Ripple) [July 6, 2026](https://x.com/Ripple/status/2074048653019279478?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw)

 ## The Mechanics: What Full CASP Authorisation Actually Unlocks

A preliminary green-light and a full CASP license are not the same regulatory status. Under **Article 63 MiCAR**, entities must be authorised as a crypto-asset service provider and meet prudential and organisational requirements before the CSSF places them under its ongoing supervisory regime. That standing supervision, not a one-time filing, is what distinguishes full authorisation from an interim approval.

The full license also changes Ripple’s reach mechanically, not just its status. CASPs authorised in Luxembourg can offer services in other EU member states or EEA states after completing notification procedures under the freedom of establishment or the freedom to provide services. That is the “**passporting**” mechanism that lets a single national license operate across the bloc, and the direct route by which one CSSF authorisation becomes a 30-country footprint rather than [Ripple](https://coinlaw.io/ripple-labs-statistics/) needing separate sign-off in each EEA jurisdiction.

Authorisation also comes with a public paper trail. Once granted, the authorised entity is published in the national public register maintained by the CSSF and the electronic central register maintained by **ESMA (the European Securities and Markets Authority)**. That gives counterparties and regulators elsewhere in the bloc a verifiable, cross-checkable record of the license rather than a company’s own claim of compliance.

## Why Luxembourg, and Why Now?

MiCAR became applicable to CASPs as from December 30, 2024, starting the clock on a transition window during which firms already operating in the EU could keep serving customers under national rules while their full authorisation applications were reviewed.

[Ripple’s preliminary approval](https://coinlaw.io/ripple-luxembourg-mica-approval-eu-crypto-push/), announced in June 2026, and Monday’s upgrade to full authorisation track that transitional path to its conclusion rather than a fresh application from zero, a sequencing pattern in [SEC and CFTC crypto regulation](https://coinlaw.io/sec-and-cftc-regulations-on-cryptocurrencies-statistics/) enforcement actions where firms move from provisional relief to standing authorisation.

Pairing the CASP license with its existing **EU e-money institution license** matters for a company selling enterprise payments infrastructure, not a retail app. A single Luxembourg-anchored EMI-plus-CASP combination lets Ripple offer both regulated payment-token settlement and e-money services under one supervisory relationship, rather than assembling a patchwork of national approvals for banks and corporates operating across borders.

That single-integration structure is the more consequential story for Ripple’s institutional customers than the license announcement itself. It is what a bank’s compliance team actually has to evaluate before signing a contract, a dynamic that echoes the broader push toward regulated rails.

## What This Does Not Mean for XRP?

The CASP authorisation applies to Ripple’s regulated payments business (the corporate entity moving money for banks and enterprises), not to XRP as a traded asset. [XRP](https://coinlaw.io/xrp-vs-swift-statistics/) is named in Ripple’s press release as one of the company’s product offerings alongside the stablecoin [RLUSD](https://coinlaw.io/rlusd-statistics/), but the CSSF license does not itself alter XRP’s trading venues, custody arrangements, or market classification anywhere in the EEA.

## CoinLaw’s Takeaway

The mechanism here is passporting, not just approval: a single **2026** CSSF sign-off stands in for **30** separate national licenses.

Layering that onto an **existing EMI license** gives Ripple a combined regulatory base that few digital-asset firms currently hold in Europe. It is aimed squarely at the banks and corporates who need one supervised counterparty, not a license in every member state where they operate.

None of that changes what the license covers. It governs Ripple’s regulated payments infrastructure business, and reporting or reading it as a signal about XRP’s price or trading status extends the announcement well past what the CSSF or Ripple’s own press release actually states.