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June 12, 2026
Altcoins · · 3 mins read · 461 words

Is XRP a Stablecoin? What XRP Actually Is (and Isn’t)

No — XRP is a volatile cryptocurrency, not a stablecoin. Here is the difference, and where Ripple's actual stablecoin RLUSD fits in.

Elena Petrova
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Elena Petrova J.D. Verified
Regulation Correspondent
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No, XRP is not a stablecoin. XRP is the native, freely-traded cryptocurrency of the XRP Ledger, and its price moves up and down with the market. A stablecoin, by contrast, is designed to hold a steady value — almost always pegged to a fiat currency such as the US dollar. The two are fundamentally different kinds of digital asset.

Why XRP is not a stablecoin

A stablecoin keeps its value through a pegging mechanism — typically fiat reserves held 1:1 (as with USDC or USDT) or crypto collateral locked in a smart contract (as with DAI). XRP has none of these. It is not backed by reserves, it is not redeemable for a fixed amount of dollars, and nothing in the protocol targets a stable price. Its value is set purely by supply and demand on exchanges, which is why it can rise or fall sharply in a single day.

What XRP is actually used for

XRP was created to move value quickly and cheaply across the XRP Ledger, a decentralized payments-focused blockchain. It is often used as a bridge asset for cross-border transfers and settles in a few seconds at very low cost. That utility is about speed of settlement, not price stability — a fast-moving asset can still be volatile.

Where the confusion comes from: RLUSD

Some of the “is XRP a stablecoin” confusion comes from Ripple, the company closely associated with XRP, launching its own dollar stablecoin called RLUSD. RLUSD is a stablecoin — a fiat-backed token pegged to the US dollar — but it is a separate asset from XRP. Holding XRP does not give you a stablecoin, and RLUSD does not replace XRP.

Stablecoin vs. volatile crypto: a quick comparison

  • XRP: price floats with the market; no peg; used for settlement and as a bridge asset.
  • USDC / USDT: pegged to $1; backed by reserves; used to hold dollars on-chain, trade, and move value without volatility.
  • RLUSD: Ripple’s dollar stablecoin, pegged to $1 — distinct from XRP.

Frequently asked questions

Can XRP be used like a stablecoin?

Not reliably. Because its price is volatile, XRP is unsuitable for anyone who needs to hold a stable dollar value. For that, traders use a dollar-pegged stablecoin instead.

Is XRP pegged to the dollar?

No. XRP has no dollar peg and no reserves backing a fixed price.

What is the difference between XRP and RLUSD?

XRP is a volatile cryptocurrency; RLUSD is a dollar-pegged stablecoin issued by Ripple. They are two different assets.

This article is educational information about how these assets work and is not financial advice.

Disclaimer: The content on this page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Always do your own research before making investment decisions.

Elena Petrova
About the author
Verified
Elena Petrova
Regulation Correspondent · 10+ years experience

Elena Petrova is a regulatory correspondent specializing in crypto law and policy with over 10 years of financial journalism experience. Formerly a finance reporter at Reuters, Elena covers SEC enforcement, MiCA implementation, and global stablecoin regulations. She holds a J.D. from Georgetown Law and is a member of the New York State Bar. Her regulatory analysis is frequently referenced by compliance officers and legal teams at major exchanges.

Education
J.D. Georgetown Law, B.A. International Relations, LSE
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Conflicts of interest

I have no current legal practice or retainer relationships with any cryptocurrency company. Past employment relationships are listed publicly.

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