How to Buy Ripple USD in Canada (2026 Guide)
What to know before buying Ripple USD
RLUSD is issued natively on two chains: the XRP Ledger and Ethereum. This is rare for a stablecoin at launch, and it directly shapes how you buy and hold it. The XRP Ledger deployment uses the ledger's native token-issuance primitives, which means a holder must set up a trustline to the RLUSD issuing account before the wallet can receive the token. Sending RLUSD on XRPL to an account with no trustline does not result in receipt; the transaction fails or the funds remain unavailable.
The Ethereum deployment is a standard ERC-20. No trustline required, but normal gas reality applies, and Ripple has published the contract address at ripple.com. Verify it there rather than relying on search results. Imitator contracts for RLUSD appeared within weeks of the December 2024 launch.
Listings have expanded steadily since launch. Kraken, Bitstamp, Bullish, and Uphold have listed RLUSD, with more exchanges adding support through 2025. Coinbase's listing status should be checked directly. Offshore, Bitso and LMAX Digital have supported RLUSD for corridors Ripple itself uses in its payments product.
The recurring user mistake with RLUSD is the XRPL trustline. New holders buy RLUSD on an exchange, withdraw to a fresh XRPL address they just generated in Xaman or a hardware wallet, and find the transaction rejected because the destination has no trustline to the RLUSD issuer. The trustline setup itself costs a small amount of XRP as a reserve increase. Do this before initiating the withdrawal, not after.
Before buying, decide whether you need RLUSD on XRPL (for Ripple's payment rails or XRPL DEX routing) or on Ethereum (for DeFi integration). The two sides are bridgeable but not fungible without a bridge.