en
Back to the list

Ripple's RLUSD stablecoin goes live in Japan after regulatory approval

source-logo  coindesk.com 1 h
image

Ripple's dollar-backed stablecoin $RLUSD is now greenlit for usage in Japan after clearing the country's financial regulator, giving the token entry into one of Asia's most tightly regulated crypto markets.

The Japan Financial Services Agency approved $RLUSD as a new type of electronic payment instrument under the country's Payment Services Act, a category meant for foreign-issued stablecoins that meet Japanese standards.

A stablecoin is a crypto token designed to hold a steady value, in this case pegged to the U.S. dollar. $RLUSD will be available to both institutions and retail customers through SBI VC Trade, the digital asset arm of Japanese financial group SBI, on its VCTRADE platform.

Japan runs one of the strictest stablecoin regimes in the world, so clearing a foreign-issued dollar stablecoin for both institutional and retail use is a key regulatory step.

$RLUSD itself remains small, however. Ripple said it has reached about $1.7 billion in market value since launching in late 2024, a fraction of the roughly $186 billion in Tether's $USDT and $74 billion in Circle's $USDC, the two stablecoins that dominate the market.

The launch delivers on a memorandum of understanding the two firms signed in August 2025 and builds on a relationship dating to 2016, when Ripple and SBI began working together on cross-border payments and blockchain infrastructure in Asia.

$RLUSD will "serve as a bridge for payments, tokenization and collateral management," connecting Japanese businesses to global dollar liquidity, said Jack McDonald, Ripple's senior vice president of stablecoins, in a statement.

$RLUSD is Ripple's bet on the regulated end of the stablecoin market, and it is separate from XRP, the closely-linked token the company is best known for. Ripple has long pitched $RLUSD as an enterprise token for settlements and tokenization, the practice of issuing real-world assets onchain.

The Japan launch extends that effort into Asia at a moment when stablecoins are drawing formal rules in the U.S., Europe and across the region, turning the dollar-token market into a race for official approval as much as for users.

Whether $RLUSD can close the gap on $USDT and $USDC remains to be seen, however. Approvals like Japan's give it the credentials to compete for institutional use, but it still has to convert that standing into the volume and liquidity its much larger rivals already command.

coindesk.com