Ripple Labs continues its predictable monthly escrow releases of 1 billion XRP, but the latest on-chain data shows the remaining locked tokens will take another 9 years to fully utilize at current net rates. With roughly 62 billion XRP now circulating out of a fixed 100 billion total supply, the escrow mechanism, originally designed for certainty, remains a key talking point for tokenomics and price potential.
As of June 22, 2026, Ripple holds approximately 37.95 billion XRP in escrow. This compares with roughly 62.05 billion XRP in circulation out of the fixed maximum supply of 100 billion XRP on the XRP Ledger.
This leaves about 38% of the total supply still under timed release controls, following the escrow mechanism established in 2017. Ripple placed 55 billion XRP into escrow via smart contracts designed to release up to 1 billion XRP at the start of each month.
Ripple consistently unlocks the full 1 billion XRP monthly as scheduled. However, the company typically relocks 60-80% of the unlocked amount back into new escrow contracts shortly afterward. This practice results in a net monthly addition to circulating supply of roughly 200-400 million XRP, depending on operational needs for liquidity, ecosystem development, partnerships, and other uses.
At the current average net release rate, projections indicate it could take approximately another 9 years for the remaining escrow to fully enter circulation, assuming the pattern of partial relocking continues. This timeline extends the original schedule, which once targeted completion around 2027 due to the recurring reescrow activity.
(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});The XRP escrow’s future trajectory will likely balance continued predictability with evolving Ripple priorities, adoption trends, and market dynamics. While the mechanism has successfully capped sudden supply shocks since 2017, several factors could shape its endgame and influence XRP’s price and liquidity in the coming years.
Meanwhile, strategic options like burning unused escrow or treasury allocations could emerge, influenced by regulatory clarity and ETF inflows. As the circulating supply nears the 100 billion cap, focus could shift toward utility-driven value rather than overhang concerns.
Furthermore, Ripple’s escrow strategy continues to fuel debate, with some community members arguing that reducing relocking could accelerate full circulation and reinforce XRP’s appeal as a scarce form of “hard money.” Others support the current measured approach for stability and growth. Alternatives discussed include holding unreleased tokens in non-escrow wallets or burning unused portions, though past instances like Stellar’s burn had limited price effects.

