Key Takeaways:
- XRP turned 14, highlighting the XRP Ledger’s longevity in digital payments.
- Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse and CTO Emeritus David Schwartz reflected on XRP’s growth and community contributions.
- Mastercard’s XRPL settlement plans pointed to expanding institutional payment use cases.
XRP has turned 14, marking a milestone that has renewed attention on the digital asset’s longevity and role in global payment activity. Messages shared across X by Ripple executives, the XRP Ledger Foundation, and community supporters highlighted the anniversary, emphasizing the network’s sustained operation, ecosystem participation, and continued relevance in cross-border finance.
The anniversary drew reflections from Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse and Ripple CTO Emeritus David Schwartz, who highlighted different aspects of XRP’s 14-year journey. Garlinghouse celebrated the milestone, writing: “14 years later – still the honor of a lifetime to be part of the XRP family!” His message underscored the strong community identity that has developed around XRP over more than a decade.

Schwartz focused on the network’s origins and evolution, recalling that XRP began as an effort to improve how value moves across networks. He stressed that the project’s growth ultimately depended on contributions from a much wider group of participants than its original creators. The Ripple CTO Emeritus said:
“14 years ago, we got together with an idea to build a better way to move value. What happened next was something none of us could have built alone … Happy Birthday, XRP!”
“And by ‘us,’ I don’t just mean the three of us. I mean the developers, validators, businesses, community members, and everyone who helped shape XRP into what it is today,” he also clarified.
The 14-year marker also sharpens an important point often lost in XRP debates: the ledger came first, and Ripple followed. The XRP Ledger was completed in June 2012 by Schwartz, Jed McCaleb, and Arthur Britto. After the ledger went live, a company was formed to build business use cases around the technology. It was first called Newcoin, then Opencoin, before becoming Ripple. That order gives the milestone added significance: XRP’s identity began with the ledger itself, while Ripple later became the company most closely associated with expanding its commercial use.
The XRP Ledger Foundation used the anniversary to highlight a broader Mastercard settlement push. In a June 3 post on X, the organization said Mastercard intends to expand its XRP Ledger integration for always-on settlements and time-sensitive intraday payment flows.
Mastercard separately said it plans to add intraday, weekend, holiday, and stablecoin settlement options across its global payments network, including support for Ripple’s RLUSD and XRPL. The announcement extends XRPL’s presence beyond crypto-native payment applications and into Mastercard’s broader settlement modernization efforts.
XRP Ledger Foundation said:
“Mastercard plans to expand its integration with the XRP Ledger to support always-on settlements and time-sensitive intraday payment flows. The move will leverage the XRP Ledger’s near-instant finality, predictable low fees, and proven 14-year track record.”
The expanded framework is designed to give issuers and acquirers more flexibility in settlement timing, liquidity management, and payment operations. Supported stablecoins will include USDC, PYUSD, USDG, USDP, RLUSD, and SoFiUSD across networks including Ethereum, Solana, Polygon, and XRPL. The inclusion of XRPL and RLUSD places Ripple’s ecosystem among the blockchain networks being integrated into evolving institutional settlement infrastructure.
For XRP supporters, that context gives the anniversary added relevance. The milestone now sits alongside concrete examples of how major financial firms are testing blockchain rails for faster payment operations.
Ripple’s recent statements have placed XRP at the center of its institutional strategy. Garlinghouse has described XRP as Ripple’s “North Star.” The phrase reflects Ripple’s view that product development, acquisitions, and institutional initiatives should ultimately expand XRP’s utility. Recent efforts spanning treasury services, liquidity products, regulated futures infrastructure, and cross-border payment products point in the same direction. Together, they position XRP as a key component of Ripple’s broader financial network vision rather than merely a digital asset connected to the company’s history.
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