
A $59 million RLUSD settlement was completed on the XRP Ledger on April 29 at a total transaction fee of $0.000188, cited by on-chain researcher Ripple Bull Winkle as live proof that Ripple’s payment network is already handling large-scale cross-border settlements in production.
Summary
- The $59 million transaction used Ripple’s RLUSD stablecoin on the XRP Ledger and settled for a fee of $0.000188, less than one cent, while SWIFT-based settlements of equivalent size typically take two to three business days and cost significantly more.
- The settlement was flagged by crypto researcher Ripple Bull Winkle on X and cited in Coinpedia as evidence that the XRP Ledger’s settlement capabilities are functioning at institutional scale, not just in testing environments.
- RLUSD was launched in December 2024 and has since reached a market capitalization approaching $300 million, with adoption expanding across enterprise payment providers including BKK Forex and iSend.
RLUSD settlement of $59 million was completed on the XRP Ledger on April 29, settling with a fee of just $0.000188, according to on-chain researcher Ripple Bull Winkle, whose findings were cited in a Coinpedia report alongside the same day’s NYSE Arca filing naming XRP as an eligible commodity trust asset. The transaction is notable not because large XRP Ledger transactions are new but because $59 million at sub-penny cost represents exactly the institutional settlement use case Ripple has promoted as RLUSD’s primary function: a tool for corporate treasury operations, cross-border settlements, and on/off-ramp flows where the cost and speed profile of SWIFT rails is structurally inferior.
RLUSD Settlement Demonstrates XRP Ledger at Institutional Settlement Scale
As crypto.news reported, RLUSD was designed from the outset for enterprise-grade financial applications rather than retail stablecoin use, with Ripple explicitly targeting institutional settlement, cross-border remittances, and tokenized asset collateral as the primary deployment scenarios. The integration of RLUSD directly into Ripple Payments allows the stablecoin to flow within the same on-ramp, off-ramp, and treasury infrastructure that Ripple’s existing institutional clients, including BKK Forex and iSend, already use for daily operations. A $59 million transaction for $0.000188 in fees is operationally meaningful for any institution currently using SWIFT for the same corridor, where equivalent flows carry correspondent banking fees in the range of 0.5% to 1% of notional value plus a two-to-three-day settlement delay. The same transaction on SWIFT would carry estimated costs between $295,000 and $590,000 in total fees and would not settle until the following business week.
Why This Settlement Matters Beyond the Fee Number
As crypto.news documented, Ripple’s institutional expansion in April 2026 has been the most concentrated single-month push the company has made in its history, with the KBank proof-of-concept signed April 27, the Travelex Bank partnership reaffirmed, and the US Faster Payments Council naming Ripple a G20 payments innovator all arriving within the same two-week window as today’s $59 million settlement. A live production settlement of that size on the XRP Ledger, using RLUSD rather than XRP directly, also demonstrates that Ripple’s stablecoin strategy is functioning alongside the XRP bridge asset model rather than replacing it, consistent with what Ripple has publicly described as its dual-rail approach to institutional settlement infrastructure. As crypto.news tracked, the XRP Ledger processed $59 million in this single settlement while XRP itself remains range-bound near $1.43, suggesting that network utility is expanding faster than price discovery has absorbed it.
RLUSD launched in December 2024. Its market capitalization has since grown toward $300 million, with Ripple describing it as the settlement layer for its enterprise treasury platform offering corporate clients a unified view over fiat, RLUSD, and XRP balances in a single integration.
