Ripple has cleared the strict regulatory hurdle in Japan as the RLUSD stablecoin went live in the country on June 24. This development comes after the company secured preliminary clearance under Europe’s MiCA framework. According to its statement, Ripple claimed that the Japan approval was the most important feat of the pair of achievements.
According to the official press release, RLUSD now reaches retail and institutional users through SBI VC Trade. This makes it the second foreign dollar stablecoin Japan has ever cleared after USDC. It also carries a label no other token holds in the country, becoming Japan’s first “Type 4” electronic payment instrument, which is a category that the JFSA built specifically for regulated stablecoins. This is extremely crucial since there is now a defined legal home for RLUSD inside Japanese payment law instead of operating on regulatory tolerance.
Ripple goes live in Japan after clearing MiCA
According to reports, all RLUSD transactions will have a cap of ¥1 million, which is roughly $6,200. This is to make it easier to monitor and keep the early flows at a lower volume. The token also runs on Ethereum rather than the XRP Ledger. The first version of RLUSD in Japan lives on infrastructure Ripple doesn’t control. Just days before this news dropped, Ripple picked up preliminary MiCA approval in Luxembourg, a CASP license that sets up passporting across all 30 EEA countries once it’s finalized.
The pair of achievements means that RLUSD gains legal standing across Japan and most of Europe in the span of a week. Stablecoins spent most of the last ten years growing by avoiding regulators. Issuers parked reserves offshore, set up in light-touch jurisdictions, and handled enforcement only when it caught up with them. RLUSD went the other way. It got licensed inside the regimes that matter most, and Japan and the EU sit near the top of that list. This is the part that matters for adoption. A dollar stablecoin cleared by both the JFSA and MiCA isn’t a workaround built to dodge oversight.
It is a product that banks and regulated exchanges can hold without legal guesswork. SBI handling distribution in Japan puts it in front of an established financial player, not a crypto-native niche. The ¥1 million cap and the Ethereum rails show how carefully Japan is stepping into this, but the direction is locked in. For a sector that has spent years arguing it can operate inside the rules, two clearances this strict in one week are a harder data point to wave off than another offshore launch. The open question is usage. Clearing the regulators was the hard part on paper. Whether RLUSD actually moves volume across both regions is the test that hasn’t run yet.

