Will XRP Ledger‘s (XRPL) success translate into a surge for XRP?



The XRP Ledger (XRPL) is starting to look like a financial back end that traditional finance can adopt without changing itself too much.

This is because tokenized funds can sit on the ledger, and stablecoins can move across it. At the same time, protocol upgrades keep landing, including features designed for institutions that want on-chain settlement without open access to every counterparty.

However, the awkward part for XRP holders is that a thriving XRPL does not automatically translate into proportional demand for XRP.

That is the real story in 2026. XRPL can generate significant economic activity, while XRP captures only a thin utility skim, unless market structure begins to adopt XRP as the unit of liquidity.

Put differently, XRPL can win as infrastructure and enjoy enormous gains while XRP struggles. So, the question is what part of that growth actually requires XRP.

Fees are burned, good design, weak valuation engine

XRPL links usage to XRP in the most literal way possible. Transaction fees are paid in XRP and destroyed, not distributed to validators.

Under normal conditions, the base fee is typically tiny, around 10 drops (0.00001 XRP) per transaction, and it can rise during congestion.

The design choice makes sense for security; it is a spam deterrent.

However, it is not built as a revenue stream for network operators, and it is not designed to create a visible “cash flow” that a market can easily capitalize.

At today’s fee levels, the burn math stays small. A million transactions at the base fee works out to about 10 XRP burned.

Even if throughput ramps, fees still need to remain low to compete with stablecoin rails and bank settlement networks.

If fee burn starts climbing in a way that matters, it probably means congestion, and congestion is the opposite of what payment networks want.

So yes, XRP is consumed every time XRPL is used. No, fee burn alone is unlikely to move valuation in a macro-relevant way.

Reserves lock XRP, small per user, big at object scale

The reserve mechanism is a more direct, measurable source of structural demand, even if it is not tied to the dollar value settled.

XRPL requires XRP reserves to open an account and to own certain ledger objects, including trust lines, offers, escrows, and other items that let users hold and transact with non-XRP assets.

Current mainnet reserve requirements are 1 XRP per account plus 0.2 XRP per owned item. Trust lines, which are needed to hold most issued assets such as stablecoins and many tokenized instruments, also consume reserves, with a small “first two trust lines” exception for new accounts.

This creates a floor for XRP demand. The more accounts and objects that exist, the more XRP sits immobilized.

But it scales with user and object counts, not with the nominal dollar value of what settles.

A billion dollars of tokenized funds can sit inside a small set of issuer accounts. On the other hand, a million retail users, each running active strategies that create trust lines, offers, and other objects, can lock far more XRP in aggregate.

Meanwhile, there is another nuance that matters for anyone trying to model scarcity.

XRPL lowered reserves in December 2024 to improve usability, reducing the bond-demand effect that reserves create. Base reserve dropped from 10 XRP to 1 XRP, and owner reserve dropped from 2 XRP to 0.2 XRP.

That tradeoff is intentional. XRPL is prioritizing adoption, and any scarcity effect from reserves is a secondary benefit.

So, the XRP reserves can still become meaningful if the ledger experiences what some developers call an object explosion, a surge in accounts, trust lines, and on-ledger activity that multiplies reserve requirements across millions of participants.

However, it is not a channel that scales automatically with tokenized asset headlines.

Liquidity inventory is where XRP can truly capture

If fees and reserves set the baseline, liquidity is the upside.

XRP captures the most value when it becomes the bridge asset or quote asset that market makers and institutions must hold as working capital to route flows and quote tight spreads.

It is the same mechanism that gives major currencies their durable monetary premium. So, this demand is not driven by tiny fees. Instead, it is pushed by the need to hold liquidity to do business.

A simple inventory model shows why this matters. If XRP-mediated payment volume reaches $1 trillion per year, the daily flow works out to roughly $2.74 billion.

If market makers keep about half a day of buffer inventory, the required inventory would be about $1.37 billion in XRP.

Using XRP’s current price of around $1.39 and about 61.1 billion XRP in circulation, $1.37 billion in inventory would equate to roughly 986 million XRP held as working capital.

That would represent a meaningful supply sink if sustained, and it would grow with volume and volatility, as stressed markets require deeper liquidity buffers.

Meanwhile, this is also where XRPL’s growth can fail to accrue to XRP.

If stablecoins become the default unit of account and the settlement asset on XRPL, stablecoin pairs, stablecoin collateral, and stablecoin routing, then activity can rise without forcing anyone to carry significant XRP inventory beyond the minimum needed for fees and reserves.

In that world, XRPL can succeed as a settlement fabric while XRP remains an optional hop rather than the center of liquidity.

ETFs and treasuries are off-ledger, but can be the cleanest scarcity driver

There is another pathway for value capture that does not depend on XRPL usage at all, regulated wrappers that warehouse XRP.

After the SEC ended the Ripple lawsuit in August 2025, the “can institutions touch this” question softened.

Since then, US spot XRP ETF products have emerged, with the funds now amassing over $1 billion in assets under management.

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