Why Banks Still Can’t Hold XRP, and What Could Change That

For years, the question around XRP has not been about speed, cost, or technical capability. It has been about whether banks can realistically hold it on their balance sheets. A recent post from an XRP community member puts that issue back into focus by pointing to a less discussed constraint: regulatory capital treatment under Basel III. Under current Basel III rules, XRP falls into what is classified as a Type 2 crypto exposure. This category carries a 1,250% risk weight. In practical terms, that makes holding XRP on a bank balance sheet extremely capital-inefficient. For every $1 of XRP exposure, a bank would need to hold roughly $12.50 in capital. For regulated institutions, that math alone is enough to shut the door, regardless of whether the asset is useful or not. This helps explain why institutional engagement with XRP has largely stayed off balance sheet. Banks have been willing to explore XRP for payments, settlement, or liquidity management, but typically through indirect structures, partnerships, or limited usage models that avoid direct exposure. The hesitation has not been about demand or infrastructure. It has been about capital rules. The regulatory bottleneck Basel III capital frameworks are designed to control risk, not to reward innovation. Assets placed in higher-risk categories quickly become unattractive for banks, even if the underlying technology works as intended. In XRP’s case, the punitive risk weighting effectively labels it as something banks cannot rationally hold.

🚨 THIS IS WHY XRP HAS BEEN “UNHOLDABLE” FOR BANKS AND WHY THAT MAY BE ABOUT TO CHANGE

Under Basel III, XRP currently sits in Type 2 crypto exposure, carrying a punitive 1250% risk weight.

Translation for Wall Street:
👉 Holding XRP on a bank balance sheet is… pic.twitter.com/rGLIZxdvIJ

— Stern Drew (@SternDrewCrypto) December 24, 2025

The XRP community argument is that this may not be a permanent state. As legal clarity improves and regulatory definitions evolve, there is a potential pathway for XRP to be reclassified into a lower-risk category, such as a qualifying crypto exposure under a different Basel treatment. That would materially reduce the capital burden tied to holding the asset. If that reclassification were to occur, the implications would be structural rather than speculative. XRP would move from being something banks can only use indirectly to something they could potentially hold, custody, and deploy without facing disproportionate capital penalties. That shift would not force adoption, but it would remove a key barrier that has shaped behavior for years. Read also: Here’s How High XRP Price Could Go If Ripple Brings Trillions Onto the XRPL Why this matters, even without XRP price talk It is important to separate this discussion from short-term price expectations. Regulatory reclassification does not automatically translate into buying pressure or guaranteed demand. What it changes is the rulebook. Banks operate within strict capital frameworks, and when those frameworks shift, behavior can change quickly. Markets often react not to narratives, but to changes in constraints. When capital rules make something viable, institutions can act. When they do not, even the best technology remains sidelined. That is why some XRP holders see regulatory capital treatment as more important than any single partnership or announcement. At the same time, this remains a conditional scenario. Reclassification would require regulatory consensus, clarity around XRP’s legal status, and alignment with evolving global standards. None of that is guaranteed, and timelines are uncertain. For now, the situation is straightforward. Banks still cannot hold XRP efficiently under current rules. The debate is about whether those rules are close to changing. If they do, the conversation around institutional XRP use would move from “why not” to “how,” but only then.

XRP-0.05%
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