Ripple has received full authorisation of its Crypto Asset Service Provider licence from Luxembourg’s financial regulator, completing the two-part regulatory structure that makes it one of the very few digital asset companies to be fully compliant under the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets regulation.
The authorisation from Luxembourg’s Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier, announced on Monday, follows the preliminary approval Ripple received in June. Combined with the EU Electronic Money Institution licence the company obtained from the same regulator earlier this year, the approval means Ripple can now offer its complete end-to-end crypto payments infrastructure to financial institutions, fintechs and corporates across all 30 countries of the European Economic Area through a single integration.
The CASP licence authorises firms to provide crypto asset services on behalf of clients including exchange, transfer and custody. Together with the EMI licence, European banks and corporates can now access Ripple’s full payment stack, covering collection, exchange and pay-out functions, within a single regulated framework for the first time.
“This CASP authorisation means Ripple enters the post-transitional MiCA era fully compliant and ready to scale,” said Cassie Craddock, Managing Director for UK and Europe at Ripple. “The institutions we work with across Europe are looking to build their digital asset services alongside regulated partners, and Ripple is licensed and ready to meet that demand.”

The approval adds to a global portfolio of more than 75 regulatory licences, positioning Ripple among a small number of digital asset firms that have achieved full MiCA authorisation since the regulation came into effect. MiCA establishes a unified licensing framework across EU member states, replacing the patchwork of national regulations that previously required separate approvals in each country.
Ripple’s European client base already spans some of the region’s largest financial institutions, and the company has been expanding its presence across major payment corridors in the region. The combined CASP and EMI permissions give those clients and prospective partners the regulatory certainty they require before committing to digital asset infrastructure at institutional scale.
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