Ripple secures Luxembourg EMI licence to expand regulated EU payments

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Ripple has secured full approval for an Electronic Money Institution licence in Luxembourg, a regulatory milestone that clears the way for the company to scale payments services across the European Union.
The authorisation was granted by Luxembourg’s financial regulator, the Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier, after Ripple met all outstanding conditions tied to its earlier approval.
The licence gives Ripple a regulated base inside the EU’s single market, allowing it to provide electronic money and payment services across member states.
The move strengthens Ripple’s European footprint at a time when crypto firms are prioritising licences that support institution-facing use cases rather than consumer-led experimentation.
From preliminary to final approval
Ripple said it had received preliminary approval for the Luxembourg licence last month.
Since then, the company has completed the remaining regulatory requirements set by the CSSF, which has now issued full authorisation.
Luxembourg is widely used by financial services firms as a gateway to the EU because of its established regulatory framework and passporting regime.
An EMI licence granted there can be leveraged to offer services across the bloc, subject to local notifications.
Ripple has not disclosed the timeline for its EU rollout or which countries will be prioritised first.
The approval marks a step change from Ripple’s previous position in Europe, where its activities were more fragmented across jurisdictions.
With the Luxembourg licence in place, the company can centralise regulated payment operations within the EU under a single supervisory authority.
Payments strategy across the EU
Ripple said the Luxembourg authorisation would support the expansion of Ripple Payments, its cross-border payments product aimed at banks, fintechs, and enterprise clients.
The product is positioned as infrastructure for international transfers, focusing on settlement efficiency and compliance rather than retail crypto trading.
By anchoring Ripple Payments in Luxembourg, the company is seeking to align its European growth with regulatory expectations around electronic money, safeguarding, and operational resilience.
The firm did not provide details on transaction volumes, target clients, or how quickly the service would scale following the licence approval.
The decision to emphasise payments infrastructure reflects a broader industry shift, as crypto firms adapt to tighter oversight and increasing demand from institutions for regulated service providers.
UK and Europe regulatory momentum
The Luxembourg licence builds on Ripple’s recent regulatory progress in the UK.
Last month, the company said it had received an EMI licence and cryptoasset registration from the Financial Conduct Authority, allowing it to offer payments and certain crypto-related services in the UK.
Together, the UK and Luxembourg approvals give Ripple regulated entry points into two of Europe’s most significant financial markets.
Ripple described Europe as a long-term strategic region, framing the latest approval as part of a broader effort to align its business with local regulatory regimes rather than relying on regulatory arbitrage.
Ripple said its total number of licences worldwide has now surpassed 75, spanning payments, electronic money, and crypto-related permissions.
The company is positioning this growing licence portfolio as a competitive advantage as regulators push the industry toward compliance-heavy, institution-focused models.
The post Ripple secures Luxembourg EMI licence to expand regulated EU payments appeared first on Invezz
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Ripple secures Luxembourg EMI licence to expand regulated EU payments

Share:

Ripple has secured full approval for an Electronic Money Institution licence in Luxembourg, a regulatory milestone that clears the way for the company to scale payments services across the European Union.
The authorisation was granted by Luxembourg’s financial regulator, the Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier, after Ripple met all outstanding conditions tied to its earlier approval.
The licence gives Ripple a regulated base inside the EU’s single market, allowing it to provide electronic money and payment services across member states.
The move strengthens Ripple’s European footprint at a time when crypto firms are prioritising licences that support institution-facing use cases rather than consumer-led experimentation.
From preliminary to final approval
Ripple said it had received preliminary approval for the Luxembourg licence last month.
Since then, the company has completed the remaining regulatory requirements set by the CSSF, which has now issued full authorisation.
Luxembourg is widely used by financial services firms as a gateway to the EU because of its established regulatory framework and passporting regime.
An EMI licence granted there can be leveraged to offer services across the bloc, subject to local notifications.
Ripple has not disclosed the timeline for its EU rollout or which countries will be prioritised first.
The approval marks a step change from Ripple’s previous position in Europe, where its activities were more fragmented across jurisdictions.
With the Luxembourg licence in place, the company can centralise regulated payment operations within the EU under a single supervisory authority.
Payments strategy across the EU
Ripple said the Luxembourg authorisation would support the expansion of Ripple Payments, its cross-border payments product aimed at banks, fintechs, and enterprise clients.
The product is positioned as infrastructure for international transfers, focusing on settlement efficiency and compliance rather than retail crypto trading.
By anchoring Ripple Payments in Luxembourg, the company is seeking to align its European growth with regulatory expectations around electronic money, safeguarding, and operational resilience.
The firm did not provide details on transaction volumes, target clients, or how quickly the service would scale following the licence approval.
The decision to emphasise payments infrastructure reflects a broader industry shift, as crypto firms adapt to tighter oversight and increasing demand from institutions for regulated service providers.
UK and Europe regulatory momentum
The Luxembourg licence builds on Ripple’s recent regulatory progress in the UK.
Last month, the company said it had received an EMI licence and cryptoasset registration from the Financial Conduct Authority, allowing it to offer payments and certain crypto-related services in the UK.
Together, the UK and Luxembourg approvals give Ripple regulated entry points into two of Europe’s most significant financial markets.
Ripple described Europe as a long-term strategic region, framing the latest approval as part of a broader effort to align its business with local regulatory regimes rather than relying on regulatory arbitrage.
Ripple said its total number of licences worldwide has now surpassed 75, spanning payments, electronic money, and crypto-related permissions.
The company is positioning this growing licence portfolio as a competitive advantage as regulators push the industry toward compliance-heavy, institution-focused models.
The post Ripple secures Luxembourg EMI licence to expand regulated EU payments appeared first on Invezz
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