- Ripple has been granted an Electronic Money Institution (EMI) license by Luxembourg’s financial industry regulator.
- The license allows the company to passport its service across 27 EU member states without needing a separate approval for each country.
Ripple has gained an Electronic Money Institution (EMI) license to operate as a regulated financial company across the European Union. The California-based company received the license from the Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier, Luxembourg’s financial industry watchdog.
Ripple first announced its progress with the new license last week, revealing that it had received preliminary approval from the CSSF. This served as a green light for the company to meet certain conditions in order to receive the license.
The firm says it has since fulfilled all the requirements and has now officially received the approval.

Cassie Craddock, Ripple’s managing director for UK and Europe, described the new license as “a transformative milestone that reinforces Ripple’s presence at the heart of European finance.”
She added:
Europe has always been a strategic priority for us, and this authorization allows us to scale our mission of providing robust, compliant blockchain infrastructure to clients across the EU. We are now better positioned than ever to help European businesses transition into a more efficient, digital-first financial era.
The license allows the company to issue electronic money and provide financial services in the EU. Under the region’s passporting regulations, it can use the same license to serve customers in every country in the 27-member bloc without requiring any new approvals.
One of the provisions that companies must meet to obtain an EMI is that customer funds must be fully segregated from their own. This is important for any crypto firm as the sector has been hit by asset co-mingling on dozens of occasions, which almost always ends up in lost funds if the company blows up. One of the best-known examples is FTX, which went down with billions of dollars in customer funds, leading to the arrest and imprisonment of founder Sam Bankman-Fried and associates.
Ripple’s Expanding Regulatory Approvals
The Luxembourg license is the latest in a long line of approvals globally for Ripple, which has become one of the most compliant crypto firms. Last month, it received an EMI license from the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority. The FCA, known to be one of the strictest financial watchdogs, also registered the company as a crypto asset service provider.
Ripple now claims to have 75 financial service licenses globally. Commenting on the company’s progress, President Monica Long stated:
By extending Ripple’s licensing portfolio and evolving our payments solution, we are doing more than just moving money. We are managing the end-to-end flow of value to unlock trillions in dormant capital and moving legacy finance into a digital future.
Long has predicted that this year will be the start of crypto’s “production era,” as we reported, and being a fully licensed financial services firm gives Ripple an edge over rivals as crypto goes mainstream.
XRP trades at $1.63, losing 14.6% over the past week.













