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Ripple Secures UK Electronic Money Licence Through FCA Approval - A Major Regulatory Milestone

Ripple Secures UK Electronic Money Licence Through FCA Approval - A Major Regulatory Milestone

Published:
2026-01-09 16:58:48
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Ripple secures UK electronic money licence through FCA approval

Ripple just landed a heavyweight regulatory win—the UK's Financial Conduct Authority greenlit its electronic money licence. This isn't just another compliance checkbox; it's a direct pass into the heart of Europe's financial system.

Why This Licence Changes Everything

The FCA's stamp transforms Ripple from a blockchain innovator into a licensed financial operator. It can now issue e-money and provide payment services across the UK—legally, smoothly, and at scale. Forget speculative trading; this is about moving real value through regulated channels.

Bypassing Traditional Banking Roadblocks

Traditional cross-border payments still crawl through correspondent banking networks. Ripple's licence lets it cut those middlemen entirely—offering institutions a faster, cheaper alternative that regulators actually trust. It's infrastructure-level disruption, not just another crypto app.

The UK's Crypto Ambitions Get a Boost

London's been chasing crypto relevance. By approving Ripple, the FCA signals that serious blockchain companies can operate within its rules—not in some regulatory gray zone. Other jurisdictions are watching; this move could trigger a domino effect of licences across major economies.

What's Next for Ripple's Expansion

With the UK secured, Ripple's global licensing playbook gets a proven template. Expect aggressive moves into other strategic markets—using this FCA approval as leverage. The goal isn't just to serve banks but to become the backbone of their payment systems.

One cynical finance jab: Traditional banks will now pay fees to the very technology they spent years dismissing as a fringe experiment. The irony's almost as satisfying as the efficiency gains.

Bottom line: This licence isn't about Ripple surviving regulation—it's about using regulation as a weapon to dominate institutional payments. The old guard should be worried.

Ripple’s licence approval expands the reach of UK-regulated payments

The UK regulatory approval enables Ripple to comply with the UK’s anti-terrorist financing and money laundering regulations. According to the FCA report, the company is expected to focus on expanding its regulated payments infrastructure in the UK, using EMI authorization as a basis to strengthen its ties with banks, payment providers, and institutional clients.

The UK financial regulator revealed that Ripple is prohibited from running cryptocurrency ATMs and serving retail customers without first obtaining FCA approval. The cross-border payments company is also prohibited from designating agents or distributors, or issuing electronic currency to individuals, small businesses, or charitable organizations.

The FCA regulatory approval marks an important step for Ripple as it increases its presence in regulated markets. 

XRP, the cryptocurrency linked to Ripple’s payment and settlement systems, slightly increased in value following the announcement. At the time of publication, the digital asset was trading at approximately $2.0964, representing a gain of more than 10% over the previous seven days.

UK crypto regulatory regime advances under FCA framework

Ripples’ Electronic Money Institution (EMI) authorization coincides with the UK’s efforts to incorporate digital assets into its financial system. 

In December last year, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) launched its consultation that will ultimately define how crypto firms operate in Britain.

FCA consulted on topics such as listing regulations for cryptocurrency tokens, exchange standards, market abuse, restrictions for brokers, and other intermediaries. The regulator also consulted on lending and borrowing, decentralized finance (DeFi), and staking. The UK financial regulator requested input on prospective cryptocurrency regulation under the new regulatory framework.

In an announcement, the UK regulator stated that it plans to build a regulatory system for the cryptocurrency industry by 2027. The deadline for responding to the FCA’s consultation is 12 February 2026.

“This is it for the U.K., this is the definitive regime for regulating the issuance and intermediation of crypto assets.”

-Dea Markova, Director of Policy at Crypto Infrastructure Firm Fireblocks.

In October 2023, the Treasury released a comprehensive proposal for establishing a financial services regulatory framework for cryptoassets. The proposal called for the creation of new regulated activities for cryptoassets, requiring crypto companies that want to offer related services in the UK to obtain FCA authorization.

In 2025, the Government presented the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Cryptoassets) Regulations 2025 (FSMA) to Parliament, which WOULD bring cryptoassets within the FCA’s regulatory purview.

Earlier today, Cryptopolitan reported that the FCA launched a crypto licence portal for crypto companies to apply ahead of the regulatory regime that is scheduled to take effect next year. 

According to the FCA report, businesses registered under the MLRs are subject to the FSMA authorization requirement. The report noted that the FSMA also applies to businesses approved by the Payment Services Regulations of 2017 or the Electronic Money Regulations of 2011.

The UK financial regulator has disclosed that, before the new system comes into effect, companies that have already been approved under the FSMA to participate in extra-regulated activities must amend their existing permits.

According to instructions from the FCA, crypto companies must request a pre-application meeting with the Financial Regulator’s Pre-Application Support Service (PASS).

The UK regulator announced that the application period must conclude at least 28 days prior to the new regulation taking effect. The application period is anticipated to begin in September 2026.

The FCA will offer a savings facility during the application stage through a Treasury draft Statutory Instrument, allowing the business to keep providing cryptoasset services until its application is finally decided.

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