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Ripple Clears MiCA Just Days After the EU Deadline Closed
Ripple has cleared the last regulatory hurdle standing between it and the entire European market. On July 6, 2026, the company announced it received full authorization for its Crypto Asset Service Provider (CASP) license from Luxembourg’s Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier (CSSF), the step that makes it fully compliant under the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation, or MiCA. What that authorization actually unlocks, and why the timing matters, is the real story. What the License Actually Unlocks The practical effect of a CASP authorization is bigger than a single-country approval. Under MiCA, a license granted by any one member state passports across the whole European Economic Area, so Ripple’s Luxembourg approval lets it offer its regulated crypto payments product to financial institutions, corporates, and businesses in all 30 EEA countries, the 27 EU members plus Iceland, Liechtenstein, and Norway, without applying separately in each. In effect, one regulator’s sign-off opens a market of roughly 450 million people. The authorization follows Ripple’s preliminary approval from June 2026 and sits alongside its existing EU EMI license, giving the company two of the core regulated permissions for operating in European crypto. Ripple frames the CASP approval as making it one of a small group of digital asset firms with full MiCA authorization, part of a global portfolio it puts at more than 75 regulatory licenses. As Cassie Craddock, Ripple’s Managing Director for UK and Europe, put it, the authorization means the company “enters the post-transitional MiCA era fully compliant and ready to scale.”
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
Why the Timing Is the Point That phrase, “post-transitional MiCA era,” is the key to why this approval matters more than it would have a year ago. MiCA’s full framework for crypto service providers took effect on December 30, 2024, but it came with an 18-month grandfathering window that let firms already operating under national laws keep serving EU clients while they pursued a license. That window closed on July 1, 2026, just days before Ripple’s announcement, and there are no extensions. The distinction now is stark. Before July 1, a firm could operate on transitional cover without a full license. After it, only firms with an actual CASP authorization can legally provide crypto services in the EU, anyone still relying on a pending application or a legacy national registration has to stop serving EU clients or risk enforcement. Ripple crossing the line days after the deadline means it isn’t scrambling to catch up; it’s positioned to do business precisely when many competitors are being forced to pause. That’s the strategic value of the timing, and it’s why the company is emphasizing “ready to scale” rather than simply “compliant.” Who Else Made the Cut Ripple joins a still-selective group. As of mid-2026, roughly 280 firms hold full CASP authorization across the EU, according to figures drawn from ESMA’s official register. The list of major names that have secured it includes Kraken, Coinbase, Binance, OKX, Crypto.com, and Bitstamp, alongside firms like Bitpanda (authorized through Austria) and Bitvavo (through the Netherlands). Authorizations have clustered in a handful of crypto-friendly jurisdictions, with Luxembourg, Malta, Ireland, and Austria acting as the main hubs, chosen for their established regulatory experience and processing. That clustering, and the fact that only around 200 firms cleared the bar out of the far larger pool that operated under the old national regimes, underlines how demanding full authorization has proven. A CASP license isn’t a registration; it follows a full review of governance, capital adequacy, management suitability, IT security, and anti-money-laundering controls. Ripple securing it through Luxembourg’s CSSF, a regulator known for its financial-services rigor, adds to that signal. For Ripple, the authorization is less an endpoint than a starting gun. Craddock’s framing points to where the company sees demand: institutions across Europe, she said, want to build digital-asset services “alongside regulated partners,” and a fully licensed Ripple is now able to be that partner across the bloc rather than in one market at a time. For the wider industry, the approval is another data point in the same trend the July 1 deadline crystallized, the EU crypto market is consolidating around a smaller number of fully regulated players, with access to Europe’s users now gated behind a license that most legacy operators never obtained. Ripple has ended up on the right side of that line, with the timing to match.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Consult a professional before making investment decisions.