Ripple has cleared an important regulatory hurdle in Europe, but the headline is easy to misread. The company secured a preliminary approval from Luxembourg’s financial regulator — not a finished authorization — and the distinction matters for anyone tracking the Ripple MiCA license as a signal for XRP and RLUSD.
What Happened
On June 23, Ripple received preliminary approval to operate as a Crypto-Asset Service Provider from the Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier, or CSSF, Luxembourg’s markets watchdog. The approval arrived as a so-called Green Light Letter, an early-stage signal that a firm is on track rather than a final stamp.
Ripple is pairing that letter with an Electronic Money Institution license it finalized in the same jurisdiction earlier in the year. Together the two approvals place Ripple inside MiCA’s regulatory perimeter — the EU’s unified crypto framework — where a single authorization can passport services across member states. The final CASP license, however, still has to be issued.
What It Means for Traders
A Green Light Letter is best read as reduced regulatory risk, not resolved regulatory risk. It signals the CSSF is satisfied with Ripple’s direction, which lowers the odds of an outright rejection. But conditions still have to be met, and the timeline to a full license is not fixed.
For XRP holders and RLUSD watchers, the practical upside is distribution. A full MiCA authorization would let Ripple offer regulated services across the bloc from one base, smoothing access for European institutions that need a compliant counterparty. Until the license is granted, that access remains conditional — a reason to treat the news as progress rather than a finished catalyst.
The Bigger Picture
MiCA is reshaping how crypto firms compete in Europe. As the framework’s deadlines bite, licensed operators gain a structural advantage over unregistered rivals, and jurisdiction choice becomes strategy. Luxembourg’s appeal is its combination of financial-sector depth and a regulator experienced with cross-border firms.
Ripple stacking an EMI license with a CASP approval in one country shows how firms are assembling regulatory stacks rather than chasing single permissions. The company that holds the cleanest EU authorizations will have an easier path to banks, payment rails, and institutional clients that cannot transact with anyone outside the perimeter.
Conclusion
Ripple’s Luxembourg progress is real, but it is a milestone on the way to a MiCA license, not the license itself. Traders watching XRP and RLUSD for a regulatory catalyst should track what Ripple still has to prove before the CSSF converts the Green Light Letter into full authorization.
This article is informational only and does not constitute financial advice.

















