XRPL stablecoins surge to $900M, but the breakout trend is not RLUSD

Editor
6 Min Read


Stablecoin supply on the XRP Ledger has climbed to nearly $890 million, up 20.56% over the past 30 days. Ripple’s RLUSD explains almost all of that size, and a second dollar token is reshaping who issues XRPL’s dollars: Valtorum’s USDV, now at $39.3 million.

RLUSD accounts for $844.58 million of that total (94.9%), USDV holds $39.3 million (4.4%), while USDC trails at just $3.7 million.

That climb is happening against a shrinking backdrop, as the global stablecoin market is at $311.39 billion, down 2.31% over the same 30-day period. XRPL is moving in the opposite direction to the broader market, even though the ledger still accounts for only about 0.29% of the global stablecoin supply.

XRPL stablecoin supply is still RLUSD-dominated
A donut chart shows XRPL’s $889.58 million stablecoin supply is dominated by RLUSD at 94.9%, with USDV at 4.4% and USDC at 0.4%.

Where RLUSD is moving

RLUSD still explains the size, as XRPL now holds roughly 51.7% of RLUSD’s total supply, up from a smaller share a month earlier. RLUSD’s overall market cap fell 9.53% to $1.6 billion over that same period.

RLUSD on XRPL climbed 15.58% over 30 days to $844.6 million, while the stablecoin supply on Ethereum fell 26.61% to $789.8 million over the same stretch.

RLUSD location Current supply 30-day change What it signals
XRPL $844.6M +15.58% More RLUSD liquidity is being concentrated on XRPL
Ethereum $789.8M -26.61% Supply outside XRPL is shrinking
Total RLUSD market cap ~$1.6B -9.53% RLUSD is not expanding everywhere
XRPL share of RLUSD ~51.7% Rising XRPL has become the larger RLUSD venue

Ripple has its own reasons to keep dollars within its payments network. The company’s RLUSD page describes the token as natively issued on XRPL and Ethereum, fully backed by segregated cash and cash equivalents.

Ripple built it for payments, remittances, treasury flows, and settlement, so corridor partnerships that route through XRPL, including recent distribution deals, add a plausible reason for more of that liquidity to land there.

The second dollar token

DefiLlama describes USDV as a permissioned dollar token issued by Valtorum on XRPL, in which holder trustlines require issuer authorization before they can transact. The platform lists USDV as fiat-backed and lists its audits field as “No.”

Valtorum’s own litepaper describes something broader: a synthetic dollar built for institutions, payment networks, and on-chain markets.

The token is designed for native settlement across XRPL, Stellar, Solana, Sui, and Ethereum. The reserve model it describes can include stablecoins, hard assets, bonds, Treasuries, and crypto collateral, a wider architecture than the fiat-backed label DefiLlama uses.

Valtorum’s own reserve dashboard shows feeds still being staged for launch, with reserve coverage marked “attestation pending.”

Only the XRPL registry is live, while the Stellar, Solana, Sui, and Ethereum listings wait their turn. USDV’s compliance page states that only wallets and participants approved by Valtorum may participate in the token’s network.

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