The post Ripple’s RLUSD Is Now Listed on Gate, Binance, and OKX. How Big Can It Get? appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
Eighteen months ago, Ripple’s (CRYPTO:XRP) dollar stablecoin, RLUSD, didn’t exist. Today it trades on Gate, Binance, and OKX, three of the bigger names in crypto, after the latest Gate listing went live.
It’s a quick climb for a coin that only launched at the end of 2024, and it puts a fair question on the table for anyone watching Ripple. A stablecoin lives or dies on how many places accept it, and all of a sudden RLUSD is being accepted in the big ones.
So how did Ripple’s regulated, dollar-backed stablecoin spread this fast, what keeps pulling exchanges and big institutions toward it, and can it carve out enough room in a market two giants already own?
The newest step came on June 15, when RLUSD went live on Gate with trading pairs against Tether’s USDT, Bitcoin, Ethereum, and XRP. Anyone on the exchange can now move straight in and out of Ripple’s dollar.
Gate is the third major exchange to add RLUSD this year, after Binance brought it on in January and OKX followed in April with more than 280 trading pairs and the option to use it as collateral. Going from brand-new to listed across three big exchanges in about six months is a fast climb for any stablecoin.
Those listings show Ripple methodically getting its stablecoin in front of as many traders as possible, and it has worked. RLUSD has grown from nothing 18 months ago to around $1.65 billion in market cap today. That is still small in stablecoin terms, but it is enough that the major exchanges now want it on their books. The OKX deal in April was the moment it started being treated as serious infrastructure rather than a side project.
Ripple designed RLUSD regulator-first, issued under a New York trust charter and fully backed by dollars and cash equivalents, with a level of transparency that makes exchanges and big institutions comfortable holding it. That is why it has picked up serious institutional users like the trading firm LMAX and the broker Interactive Brokers, not just exchange listings.
Another key reason for RLUSD’s institutional adoption is because the rules are moving in its favor. Europe’s MiCA framework now forces exchanges to drop stablecoins that don’t meet its standards, and through 2025 and into 2026 the major platforms restricted or pulled Tether’s USDT for their European users. And when the most popular stablecoin gets pulled, the exchanges still need a dollar coin to replace it, and a fully-backed, compliant one is exactly what fits.
That is the gap RLUSD was built for. It also happens to be Ripple’s settlement dollar, so every new listing feeds the wider payments network it is part of, which gives Ripple even more reason to keep pushing it out.
The whole stablecoin market is worth about $320 billion, and two coins own roughly four-fifths of it—Tether’s USDT at around $188 billion and Circle’s USDC near $78 billion. Against that, RLUSD’s $1.65 billion is about half a percent of the market.
USDT and USDC have years of built-up liquidity, exchange support, and habit behind them—they are the dollars traders reach for without thinking, and such a default position is tough to break. A newer coin can grow fast off a small base, like RLUSD has, and still trade a long way behind on the numbers that decide a standard settlement rail.
RLUSD isn’t really trying to wrestle USDT for the top trading spot, which is the honest way to read it. But to grow into anything major, it has to keep proving it belongs in the same conversation as the giants. That job is harder when most of its own supply—roughly 82%—doesn’t even live on Ripple’s own XRP Ledger, but on Ethereum, where the deep institutional and DeFi money already is.
RLUSD isn’t going to catch Tether on size any time soon, and it probably doesn’t need to. Its realistic goal was never to be the coin everyone trades with, but to become the default regulated dollar for banks, institutions, and cross-border settlement—the corner of the market where compliance counts for more than raw size. That is the lane Ripple aimed it at from the start, and the exchange roll-out is laying the groundwork.
So, if RLUSD keeps showing up in institutional platforms, payment corridors, and regulated venues, that is the sign it is becoming something big. The exchange listings are what get noticed, but they are really just the entry point. A coin like USDT got big by being everywhere traders looked. RLUSD is betting it can get even bigger by being the one coin banks and regulators are willing to touch, and that is a slower build with a higher ceiling if it works.
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The post Ripple’s RLUSD Is Now Listed on Gate, Binance, and OKX. How Big Can It Get? appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

