Yet while most of the market debated ETFs and exchange listings, XRP’s core network, the XRP Ledger (XRPL), kept quietly evolving in the background.
It is now re-emerging as an infrastructure layer blockchain network that powers real-world payments, stablecoins, and the early wave of tokenized assets.
Ripple’s long regulatory standoff ended in August 2025, closing a chapter that defined much of XRP’s last decade.
A US court confirmed that XRP’s retail sales are not securities, while Ripple paid a $125 million civil penalty to settle institutional violations. With both sides dropping appeals, the decision gave Ripple the legal certainty it lacked for so many years.
The effect has been immediate as XRP could finally integrate with regulated payment partners, which is something few US-linked blockchains can do.
One clear example of this real-world comeback is the level of institutional adoption the blockchain enjoys globally.
In September, SBI Group and Tobu Top Tours reportedly unveiled plans to issue prepaid travel tokens on the XRPL in Japan.
“This is significant as the market in Japan for prepaid payment instruments is $200 billion annually. The tokens will circulate in regional economic zones, from tourist hotspots to sports communities, driving local spending and digital innovation.”
According to the Nikkei report, each token functions like a digital prepaid card, redeemable at local stores and tourism hubs. Users can top up with yen, spend instantly, and cash out without intermediaries.
For a market where prepaid instruments already handle about $200 billion a year, moving those flows to XRPL represents one of the largest blockchain integrations attempted in a major economy.
Essentially, the goal isn’t crypto speculation; it’s infrastructure modernization. By building on XRPL’s low-fee, high-throughput ledger, Japan is testing how digital tokens can drive cashless tourism and local commerce while fully complying with financial regulations.
Another project, from Webus International, pushes XRP’s utility even further.
Webus plans to turn those isolated reward systems into transferable digital assets. Tokenizing balances lets consumers swap or redeem them across brands in real time, unlocking liquidity that loyalty programs have historically trapped.
This also presents a subtle example of XRP’s renewed role in connecting previously closed financial systems without breaking compliance.
Another clear evidence of XRPL’s growth is its growing footprint across the stablecoin and real-world asset (RWA) tokenization markets.
Ripple, through its RLUSD stablecoin, is competing directly in the over $300 billion stablecoin market.
While the RLUSD’s $898 million market capitalization pales in comparison to the billions of Tether’s USDT and Circle’s USDC, the digital asset has gained significant institutional usage.
The compliance angle also differentiates XRPL from rival blockchain networks like Tron and Solana by embedding regulation into the network.
Earlier this month, XRPL introduced the Multi-Purpose Token (MPT) Standard, which allows digital asset issuers to limit transfers to verified holders through decentralized identifiers and verifiable credentials.
That means every compliant stablecoin or tokenized asset can enforce regulatory controls directly at the protocol level, and no third-party filter is required.
“The MPT standard strategically positions the XRPL as the leading secure and compliant institutional blockchain for the future of tokenized finance.”
Meanwhile, that vision extends well beyond stablecoins.
As a result, the blockchain network now ranks among the top 10 chains for RWA tokenization, handling more than $360 million in assets.
“In a conservative “base case” [XRPL is] a serious corridor player and RWA registry/settlement layer; On the upside, it’s a GO-TO ledger for Stablecoin-settled cross-border Treasury and high-grade RWA settlement with MULT-TRILLION ANNUAL THROUGHPUT by 2030.”