Ripple's RLUSD Stablecoin: The Year So Far

Ripple's $RLUSD has had a strong opening to 2026. The stablecoin's market cap climbed from $1.33 billion at the end of 2025 to a fresh $1.6 billion all-time high in late April, and OKX has just opened spot trading across more than 280 pairs. The early-year numbers tell a clear story.
$RLUSD is fully backed 1:1 by cash and U.S. Treasuries held in segregated accounts at BNY Mellon, with monthly third-party attestations and oversight from the New York Department of Financial Services and the Dubai Financial Services Authority. That regulated structure is showing up in the numbers.
How fast is $RLUSD growing?
Current market cap sits near $1.45 billion, with daily volume in the $105 million to $113 million range, and is ranked #46 on CoinMarketCap. The trajectory through Q1 and Q2 has been mostly up. Supply expanded by roughly $370 million in April alone, a 30% jump in a single month, before settling slightly off the $1.6 billion peak. There was a brief dip to $1.247 billion around March 31, but the rebound was quick.
Turnover velocity is the more revealing metric. By some analyses, $RLUSD trails only Tether in how often each token changes hands, which points to genuine payments and settlement use rather than dormant supply parked in wallets.
What does the OKX listing change?
The OKX listing went live on April 29 and immediately put $RLUSD on a top-tier global exchange with deep liquidity. The 280+ pairs were embedded in OKX's Unified Order Book from day one, sharing the same liquidity pool as $USDC trades.
There's more than spot trading. $RLUSD is usable as institutional-grade margin collateral for perpetual futures and select derivatives markets, with full deposit and withdrawal support. For a stablecoin under 18 months old, that level of integration on a top-five exchange is a meaningful jump.
Where else is $RLUSD showing up?
Beyond OKX, the 2026 activity has been broad:
Binance listed $RLUSD on Ethereum in January, with $XRP Ledger support added shortly after. Kraken, Bitstamp, Bybit, and Bitget have all added the token.
Wormhole expansion is bringing $RLUSD to Base, Optimism, and other chains for DeFi and bridging.
Ripple Prime and Bullish are using $RLUSD as collateral for Bitcoin options trading.
Singapore's MAS BLOOM sandbox is testing $RLUSD for trade finance, with Bitwave handling B2B payment flows.
ING and UniCredit are exploring euro stablecoin tech alongside Ripple, while Mastercard is piloting credit card settlements on Ripple infrastructure.
What about regulation?
The U.S. GENIUS Act and a wider 2026 legislative push are favoring compliant stablecoins. Ripple's conditional OCC approval for a national trust bank, granted in late 2025, is moving into execution. Dubai's DFSA approval is already in place. A Japan rollout with SBI is targeted for later this year.
The compliance angle is what separates $RLUSD from most of the field. Tether and Circle still dominate by raw size, and that isn't changing soon. $RLUSD isn't trying to beat them on supply. It's targeting the regulated, payments-focused slice of the stablecoin market, and the early 2026 numbers suggest there's real demand for that product.
What comes next?
$2 billion is the next line, and at April's pace, $RLUSD could clear it before summer. From there, the trajectory points higher. The Japan rollout with SBI is on the calendar, the Mastercard settlement work is moving, and the OCC trust bank approval gives @Ripple a regulated foundation few stablecoin issuers can match. $RLUSD enters the second half of 2026 with the kind of institutional setup that compounds.
Sources:
Ripple Primary issuer disclosures, custody arrangements, and regulatory framework
CoinMarketCap Market cap, circulating supply, volume, and ranking data
OKX April 29 listing announcement and trading pair details
Stablecoin Insider Turnover velocity analysis and multichain expansion tracking