Key highlights:
- Luxembourg’s CSSF provides preliminary approval for Ripple’s Crypto Asset Service Provider (CASP) license
- The move marks a major milestone in Ripple’s vision of expanding its services in Europe
- The approval comes ahead of the July 1 MiCA deadline
Crypto payments giant Ripple has moved one step closer to full compliance with Europe’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) framework. According to the latest reports, the XRP-powered company has secured preliminary approval for a Crypto Asset Service Provider (CASP) license in Luxembourg.
Notably, the development, which comes just days ahead of the July 1 MiCA deadline, marks a major milestone in Ripple’s expansion in Europe. Once the firm receives the final approval, it could provide regulated crypto payment services across the European Economic Area under a single compliance framework.
Ripple nears European expansion with MiCA license
Ripple has reportedly received preliminary approval for a Crypto Asset Service Provider (CASP) license from Luxembourg’s financial regulator, Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier (CSSF). Although the approval is not final, it marks a crucial step in the company’s plans to expand its services across Europe.
More licensing momentum!
Ripple has secured its preliminary Crypto Asset Service Provider (CASP) license in Luxembourg, paving the way for the full rollout of Ripple Payments across the EEA and full MiCA compliance: https://t.co/APQcYnCy9c
The next wave of regulated digital…
— Ripple (@Ripple) June 23, 2026
This preliminary approval could pave the way to the final license grant. Once finalized, the CASP license could permit the company to offer crypto services to banks, fintechs, and corporate clients. These services will be available across all 30 countries in the European Economic Area.
However, there are certain conditions that the regulator mandates Ripple to follow. While the company hasn’t yet revealed these conditions, the industry remains hopeful that the license will be completely approved soon. As of now, Ripple needs to wait till the CASP license is fully granted.
MiCA deadline adds pressure
What is more interesting in Ripple’s CASP license preliminary approval is its timing. This is because the MiCA transition period is set to end on July 1. After the deadline, crypto companies operating without proper authorization will be forced to suspend services.
Considering this July 1 deadline into account, Ripple’s latest achievement is significantly noteworthy. While the company still needs to meet the CSSF’s final conditions for the full CASP license approval, the regulator’s nod marks a critical step.
“MiCA has helped to unlock a new wave of institutional digital assets adoption, and we are seeing that demand accelerate across the region,” stated Cassie Craddock, Managing Director, UK & Europe at Ripple. He added:
“Financial market infrastructure is moving onchain – from cross-border payments and settlement to collateral management and tokenised assets – and banks and fintechs are actively building the digital asset capabilities they need to remain competitive. With our growing European presence, regulatory track record and institutional-grade infrastructure, we’re ready to meet the moment and support that transition at scale.”
Europe’s MiCA race intensifies
Interestingly, Ripple’s latest development comes amid the growing MiCA race. Many industry giants have already secured the EU MiCA license. While Ripple has moved closer to the final approval, it is still trailing many other platforms like Coinbase, Kraken, Bitstamp, OKX, and Crypto.com. As CoinCodex recently reported, platforms like BitGo are also expanding their footprint in Europe.
Kraken has already launched crypto services in Europe under the new regulatory regime. Coinbase and Bitstamp got their approvals from Luxembourg’s regulator. At the same time, platforms like Crypto.com and OKC secured licenses in Malta. Virtu Financial’s Irish branch recently received full MiCA approval and a CASP license.
Unlike other platforms, Ripple has embraced a different strategy. The platform is focusing primarily on payment infrastructure, stablecoin settlement, and cross-border transfers. This means that the platform’s goal is not limited to offering crypto trading services in Europe, but to build a regulated payment network.
Source:: Ripple Wins Preliminary Luxembourg License Ahead of July 1 MiCA Deadline