Ripple has achieved complete regulatory approval within the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulatory structure following Luxembourg’s Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier (CSSF) granting the company a Crypto Asset Service Provider credential.
This authorization expands upon an initial clearance Ripple obtained in June. When paired with the company’s current Electronic Money Institution credential within the EU, Ripple can now deliver regulated cryptocurrency payment solutions throughout all 30 EEA nations without requiring individual authorizations in each territory.
Cassie Craddock, who serves as Ripple’s Managing Director for the UK and European regions, stated the organization is “fully compliant and ready to scale” as the post-MiCA regulatory landscape takes shape.
The CASP credential provides Ripple with passporting privileges throughout the EEA. This framework allows banking institutions, financial service providers, and business clients across any of the 30 participating nations to utilize Ripple’s regulated payment infrastructure.
According to Ripple, this authorization places the company within an exclusive group of digital asset enterprises holding both comprehensive MiCA credentials and electronic payment authorization throughout the EU. The organization’s worldwide regulatory framework now encompasses more than 75 licenses across various jurisdictions, including clearance from the United Kingdom’s Financial Conduct Authority granted in January 2026.
The European Union’s MiCA transition window concluded on July 1, 2026. Following this date, cryptocurrency enterprises lacking proper authorization were required to terminate their operations within the bloc or potentially face regulatory consequences.
The European Securities and Markets Authority released a refreshed registry on Friday documenting 280 authorized crypto-asset service providers. This figure increased from 243 during the previous week, following the addition of 37 enterprises, including Standard Chartered, FalconX, and Sygnum Europe.
Not every organization met the compliance deadline. Binance, recognized as the world’s highest-volume cryptocurrency exchange, retracted its MiCA submission in Greece prior to July 1 and announced plans to seek authorization through another EU member nation.
Day-to-day regulatory oversight remains with national authorities, meaning enforcement consistency may differ across individual countries.
Belgium’s Financial Services and Markets Authority has demonstrated swift action. This week, the regulator identified six cryptocurrency companies conducting operations without proper authorization and placed them on its registry of unauthorized service providers.
Ripple’s authorization establishes it as among the better-prepared enterprises entering this emerging regulatory phase. Its combined licensing framework — encompassing both crypto-asset operations and electronic money services — provides a more comprehensive scope of financial capabilities than many competitors currently possess.
The organization has been systematically expanding its regulatory credentials internationally, with the Luxembourg authorization representing the most recent achievement in that strategic initiative.
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