@Ripple has received full Crypto Asset Service Provider (CASP) authorization from Luxembourg's financial regulator, the Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier (CSSF), letting it offer regulated crypto services across all 30 countries of the European Economic Area from a single license. The company announced the approval on July 6, 2026, confirming it as fully compliant under the EU's Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation.
The timing is the story. MiCA's transitional grace period ended on July 1, and firms without a license can no longer legally serve most EU clients. Ripple cleared the bar with days to spare. Many rivals did not.
What did Ripple actually get?
The CASP license lets Ripple "passport" its services across the EEA. One authorization from Luxembourg covers all 27 EU member states plus Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway, with no separate application in each market. Approved services include custody, exchange for fiat, exchange for other crypto assets and transfer of crypto assets.
The full license follows a preliminary "Green Light Letter" the CSSF issued on June 23, which signaled the regulator had finished its review and would grant the license once final technical checks were done.
Ripple now holds two Luxembourg licenses that work together. It secured a full Electronic Money Institution (EMI) license from the same regulator on February 2, 2026, after preliminary approval on January 14. The EMI license covers electronic money and payment services. The CASP license covers the wider set of crypto-asset services. Together they give banks, fintechs and corporates a single regulated point to plug into crypto payments, and they give Ripple a compliant path to move its $RLUSD stablecoin and $XRP based rails into European institutional flows.
"This CASP authorisation means Ripple enters the post-transitional MiCA era fully compliant and ready to scale," said Cassie Craddock (@CraddockCJ), Managing Director, UK and Europe at Ripple. "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."
Why does the timing matter?
MiCA is the EU's single crypto rulebook. It replaced a patchwork of national regimes with one framework covering capital, governance, anti-money-laundering rules and investor protection. The CASP rules took effect at the end of 2024, but existing operators got a grace period that closed on July 1, 2026.
That deadline reshaped the market. As of July 6, only 283 firms held full CASP authorization, cleared by 25 national regulators. Before MiCA, Europe counted more than 3,000 VASP registrations, with Poland alone accounting for well over 1,400. Most of that field did not convert. Compliance has become the barrier to entry, and Ripple is on the right side of it.
How does this fit Ripple's license stack?
Ripple has leaned on regulation as a selling point for years. The company says it holds more than 75 regulatory licenses and registrations worldwide, a figure it crossed after picking up an EMI license and cryptoasset registration from the UK's Financial Conduct Authority in January 2026.
That portfolio includes US state money transmitter licenses, a New York limited-purpose trust charter tied to RLUSD, a Singapore payments license, and a UAE authorization, among others. The two new Luxembourg licenses extend the footprint into the EU's core. Ripple says its cross-border payments product has processed more than $100 billion in volume across over 60 markets.
Who else made the cut, and who didn't?
Ripple joins a short list of firms with full MiCA clearance. Coinbase was the first major US exchange to win a MiCA license from Luxembourg, granted in June 2025, and made the country its European base. Bitstamp also chose Luxembourg as its MiCA home.
Binance is the standout miss. The largest exchange by trading volume withdrew its CASP application in Greece and began restricting core services for users in France, Italy, Poland, and Spain from July 1. Customer funds remain accessible, and Binance has said it plans to reapply in another member state.
With its CASP and EMI licenses held with a single Luxembourg regulator, Ripple can run end-to-end regulated crypto payments for banks, fintechs and corporates across all 30 EEA countries, making it one of only a handful of firms cleared to do so.
Sources:
- Ripple press release announcing full MiCA CASP authorization from Luxembourg's CSSF, dated July 6, 2026.
- Ripple press release on its full EU EMI license, dated February 2, 2026.
- Ripple press release on the preliminary CASP "Green Light Letter," dated June 23, 2026.
- CASP Tracker showing 283 authorized CASPs across 25 national regulators, verified against the official ESMA register on July 6, 2026.
- Crypto Times on Coinbase's June 2025 Luxembourg license and the EMI-CASP stablecoin path.



