RLUSD’s growth has sped up across the Ripple ecosystem while XRP price struggles to mimic the stablecoin’s success.
RLUSD’s growth continues to accelerate across the Ripple ecosystem.
The stablecoin is now a major part of the company’s payments and settlement offerings. Yet XRP price action tells a different story as many expected XRP to rise alongside RLUSD.
However, that move has not happened, and this gap raises fresh questions about how Ripple products connect to XRP value.
RLUSD Growth Reshapes the Ripple Ecosystem
RLUSD launched in late 2024 as Ripple’s USD-backed stablecoin. Adoption moved fast and in a year, the stablecoin crossed a $1.3 billion market cap and ranks among the top five USD stablecoins.
RLUSD: the year of the stablecoin pic.twitter.com/Xg7n1PKeqn
— Ripple (@Ripple) December 29, 2025
RLUSD runs on the XRP Ledger and offers fast settlement and low fees with transfers settling in seconds.
Ripple designed RLUSD for real use and the stablecoin supports treasury flows, cross-border payments and collateral use.
RLUSD Growth Shows a Stability Tradeoff
Banks prefer stability. This is because volatility creates risk during settlement and XRP once served as a bridge asset for On-Demand Liquidity. However, that role came with price swings from the cruptocurrency itself.
A 2% swing on a $100 million transfer equals a $2 million change and treasurers avoided that risk by pivoting to RLUSD instead.
As of writing, many institutions now choose RLUSD over XRP for USD flows.
This does not mean XRP failed. It merely shows a preference change as stablecoins fit bank workflows better and RLUSD shows this reality.
Ripple leaders say RLUSD complements XRP and technically, that claim holds. XRP still pays network fees and also bridges non-USD pairs like EUR to JPY.
Moreover, every RLUSD transfer burns a small amount of XRP and that burn reduces supply over time.
Regulation Boosts Stablecoin Confidence
Regulation, especially in the US, now supports stablecoin growth. For example, RLUSD received conditional approval for Ripple National Trust Bank from the US Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.
JUST IN: 🇺🇸 Ripple is set to operate as a National Trust Bank in the US pic.twitter.com/0dBkwBDyaj
— Crypto Briefing (@Crypto_Briefing) December 26, 2025
Abu Dhabi’s FSRA also recognised RLUSD as an accepted fiat-referenced token and licensed firms can now use it as collateral.
Gemini even added RLUSD support on the XRP Ledger, allowing users to move funds fast and cheaply between the XRPL and Ethereum.
Stablecoins Become a Global Settlement Layer
Stablecoins no longer serve only traders and instead act as payment rails now.
Ripple estimates that stablecoin settlement volume reached up to $30 trillion this year alone, and that figure rivals legacy systems.
Stablecoins now account for about 30% of on-chain transactions and daily active wallets tend to be more than 10 million.
XRP Price Action Shows Supply Pressure
XRP now trades near $1.85 after its price broke support at $1.87 and exchange inflows increased.
On-chain data shows that more XRP is moving to exchanges, and this often indicates selling intent.

Daily inflows ranged between 35 million and 116 million XRP in recent weeks, and that pattern indicates distribution.
Volume rose during the breakdown as selling appeared active, not accidental.
Overall, the short-term charts are showing a descending channel and the RSI currently shows oversold conditions.
Related Reading: RLUSD Stablecoin Gains Approval To Simplify US Dollar Access Across Africa
A Long Term Trend May Still Be Forming
Some analysts say that bigger things are underway for RLUSD, but the stablecoin offering has to build more payment rails first. Value capture may follow later.
As liquidity grows on XRPL, tokenised assets may arrive and Banks may deepen usage. XRP itself could gain new roles, but that future could be uncertain as markets wait for proof.
In all, RLUSD’s growth shows that Ripple executes well on utility, but XRP still needs a clear demand path that stablecoins cannot replace.