Japan Clears Ripple RLUSD For Regulated Stablecoin Use
Japan’s Financial Services Agency approved Ripple’s RLUSD as an electronic payment instrument, allowing SBI VC Trade to offer the dollar-backed stablecoin to retail and institutional users.

Japan Gives RLUSD A Payment-Instrument Route
Japan's Financial Services Agency has approved Ripple's RLUSD stablecoin as an electronic payment instrument, giving the U.S. dollar-backed token a regulated route into one of Asia's stricter crypto markets.
SBI VC Trade will offer RLUSD to both institutional and retail customers through its VCTRADE platform.
The approval matters for payments because Japan treats eligible foreign-issued stablecoins through the Payment Services Act rather than leaving them as ordinary crypto listings.
RLUSD is designed to hold a steady value against the U.S. dollar, and the Japanese approval lets Ripple test that regulated positioning with a financial group that already works with the company.
SBI and Ripple have a long-running relationship.
The launch follows a memorandum of understanding signed in August 2025 and builds on work that began in 2016 around cross-border payments and blockchain infrastructure in Asia.
Regulatory Access Is Not The Same As Liquidity
Ripple is positioning RLUSD around the regulated end of the stablecoin market.
Jack McDonald, Ripple's senior vice president of stablecoins, said the token is meant to link Japanese businesses with global dollar liquidity across payments, tokenization and collateral management.
The token remains far smaller than the stablecoin leaders.
Ripple puts RLUSD's market value at about $1.7 billion after a late 2024 launch.
Tether's USDT is about $186 billion, while Circle's USDC is about $74 billion.
Those figures keep the Japan approval in perspective.
Regulatory clearance gives RLUSD permission and credibility in a demanding market, but it does not automatically create trading volume, settlement use or collateral depth.
For merchants, exchanges and institutions, liquidity and operational reliability still decide whether a stablecoin becomes useful beyond a compliant listing.
The gap also gives banks, wallets and trading platforms a practical reason to wait before treating RLUSD as a default dollar rail.
Japan's approval creates the legal channel, while market depth will depend on whether SBI VC Trade customers use the token often enough for counterparties to hold and move it at scale.
Ripple Separates RLUSD From XRP
RLUSD is separate from XRP, the token most closely associated with Ripple.
The company has pitched RLUSD as an enterprise token for settlements and tokenization, including the issuance of real-world assets onchain.
Japan gives that strategy a practical test because the approval covers access for both institutions and retail customers.
It also arrives as stablecoins draw more formal rulemaking in the U.S., Europe and across Asia, turning dollar-token competition into a contest over approvals as well as users.
For Ripple, the Japan launch offers a market where regulatory status can be tested against everyday distribution.
SBI VC Trade can provide access, but the article does not name merchants, banks or tokenized-asset issuers that have committed to use RLUSD after the approval.
SBI VC Trade now has the channel to list RLUSD under Japan's stablecoin framework.
The unresolved commercial issue is whether Ripple can turn that approval into enough payment flow, tokenization demand and collateral use to narrow the gap with USDT and USDC.













