Ripple has received full authorization for an Electronic Money Institution (EMI) license from Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier (CSSF). The approval gives the company a regulated base to offer electronic money and payment services across the European Union. Ripple said the decision follows earlier “in-principle” clearance and completion of the regulator’s conditions.
Ripple said the CSSF issued final authorization after the firm moved from preliminary approval to a usable license. The company previously disclosed an in-principle decision, and it said the supervisor later confirmed full authorization once the remaining requirements were met.
The license category covers firms that issue electronic money and provide payment services under EU rules. EMI framework is generally used to issue e-money, safeguard customer funds, and provide payment services that can be offered across the EU.
Source: X
Luxembourg is a hub for cross-border financial services, and companies licensed there can seek to serve clients across EU markets within the relevant regulatory framework. Ripple did not publish a country-by-country rollout schedule, but it said the approval enables scaling regulated services across the bloc. The company also referenced Luxembourg’s role as a base for multi-market operations.
Ripple said it plans to use the Luxembourg EMI license to expand Ripple Payments, its cross-border product aimed at banks, fintechs, and enterprise clients. Ripple Payments is a service that manages the movement of funds for customers and connects them to payout partners. The Luxembourg authorization allows Ripple to offer services under local supervision while operating in accordance with EU rules.
Company statements said the EU license supports a broader commercial push, including onboarding institutions seeking a compliant payment infrastructure. Ripple did not provide figures for expected volumes in the EU following the authorization. However, the license helps it provide regulated payment services to clients seeking cross-border settlement tools tied to digital asset infrastructure.
Moreover, the Luxembourg authorization is part of a broader licensing effort across major financial jurisdictions. In January, the company received an EMI license and cryptoasset registration from the United Kingdom’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA). The XRP company total number of regulatory licenses and registrations worldwide has surpassed 75.
Discussion circulated on February 2 after renewed attention to documents and emails tied to Jeffrey Epstein, prompting debate among some XRP market participants. Coverage described a 2014 email attributed to Austin Hill at Blockstream that discussed investor support for projects linked to Jed McCaleb, including Ripple and Stellar.
Reports said the email referenced conversations about discouraging funding for those projects, and the correspondence has been shared widely online.
Russell McGregor urged Ripple to request government records from U.S. agencies and Congress to determine whether any Epstein-linked networks influenced early crypto policy or enforcement attention toward XRP-related entities.
David Schwartz commented on the renewed claims in public posts, according to reporting, and said he would not be surprised if the controversy reflected broader disputes from the early industry period.
At the time of writing, XRP price was trading at $1.62, down 1.27% over the past 24 hours.
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