This is a significant development for xrp ledger, as it aims to attract institutional borrowing against tokenized assets. while not directly impacting xrp's price, it enhances the utility and ecosystem of the xrpl, which could lead to increased demand for xrp as a bridge or settlement asset in the long run.
The immediate price impact on xrp itself is likely to be neutral. the lending protocol is an infrastructure upgrade for the xrpl and focuses on tokenized assets and institutional borrowing, not directly on xrp's trading price. however, successful implementation could create future demand.
This is a long-term play. the protocol is currently a proposal and needs validator approval. the full benefits and price impact will only materialize after successful implementation and widespread adoption by institutions, which could take months or even years.
Tech Ripple wants institutions to borrow against tokenized assets on XRPL A proposed XRPL standard would let institutions borrow against tokenized assets, with the blockchain enforcing loan terms while the underwriting stays with human credit teams. It still needs validator approval to go live. By Shaurya Malwa | Edited by Stephen Alpher Jun 29, 2026, 3:00 p.m. 2 min read Make preferred on Share Share this article Copy link X icon X (Twitter) LinkedIn Facebook Email Make preferred on Summary Show Ripple has proposed an XRPL Lending Protocol that would let institutions borrow against on-chain assets while keeping credit decisions off the blockchain. The system would pool single assets in “Single Asset Vaults” and automate loan mechanics at the base layer of the XRP Ledger, with features currently live only on a test network and pending validator approval. Aimed at institutional use and competing with protocols like Aave and Compound, Ripple argues its fixed, network-level rules offer more predictable risk than crypto-native governance models. Ripple is pushing to add a lending layer to the XRP Ledger, the blockchain behind XRP, in a bid to let institutions borrow against assets they hold onchain rather than just issue and move them. The proposed XRPL Lending Protocol, a copy of which was shared with CoinDesk, is built on a simple split. The blockchain handles the mechanics of a loan once it is agreed, how money is pooled, how interest adds up, how repayment is enforced and how a default is processed, while the actual credit decision, whether a borrower is good for the money and on what terms, stays with the lending institution off the blockchain. Its pitch is that a blockchain is good at enforcing rules consistently but cannot judge creditworthiness or navigate the rules that differ by jurisdiction, so that judgment should stay with the people who do it now. The protocol has two parts. A Single Asset Vault pools a single asset, and the lending layer turns that pooled money into loans with set terms. Both are still proposals, defined in technical drafts known as XLS-65 and XLS-66, and remain subject to approval by the validators who run the network. The features are available to test on a development network but are not live. The use Ripple leads with is short-term financing. A payment company holding reserves in RLUSD, its US dollar-pegged stablecoin, might need cash to fund outgoing payments before a cross-border settlement clears two days later. Instead of drawing on a bank credit line or selling assets, it could borrow against the incoming settlement through an approved pool, with repayment enforced automatically. This is separate from XRP, the token the network is best known for, and from RLUSD, which is one of the assets such a system could lend against. It is infrastructure aimed at institutions rather than a product retail users would touch directly. Ripple is also walking into a crowded field, however. Onchain lending already runs at scale through protocols like Aave, Compound, Maple and Clearpool, which collectively hold billions in deposits. However, Ripple says that those systems were built around crypto-native governance, where a protocol can change its risk rules through community votes, which it says institutions cannot underwrite in advance. Its counter is to fix the lending mechanics at the network's base layer so the behavior does not shift underneath a lender, while keeping the network public rather than walling it off to a closed group as some permissioned systems do. The XRPL Lending Protocol (XLS-65, XLS-66) proposals are subject to validator approval in the coming weeks. 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