
- XRP Ledger (XRPL) has a native burn mechanism, but it was designed to prevent spam—not to boost scarcity.
- Since launch, XRPL has burned just over 14.18 million Ripple, equal to only 0.014% of the total supply.
- At the current burn rate, it would take 1,000 years to burn just 1% of XRP’s total supply.
- If XRP introduced a Bitcoin-style halving mechanism, its price could double to $6.12 with flat demand.
- In a bullish scenario with increased demand, Ripple could surge to $15.30, though experts stress this is highly unlikely.
XRPL Burn Mechanism vs. Bitcoin Halving
The XRP Ledger (XRPL) has a built-in burn feature that destroys a small amount of XRP with every transaction. This mechanism was introduced in 2012 not to create scarcity but to deter spam and protect the network.
Since launch, XRPL has burned 14.18 million XRP, which represents just 0.014% of the total 100 billion supply. With daily burns averaging around 2,700 XRP—roughly one million per year—it would take centuries for the burn rate to have a meaningful impact on supply.
This contrasts with Bitcoin’s halving, which occurs every four years. By cutting the new issuance of coins in half, halving events have historically fueled strong supply shocks, sparking significant price rallies.
XRP Price if Burns Created Real Scarcity
Currently, XRP trades at $2.90 with a market cap of around $182 billion. If XRP introduced a halving-style mechanism, similar to Bitcoin, Gemini (Google’s AI chatbot) suggested the following scenarios:
- Cautious Scenario (Flat Demand): If supply halves to around 30 billion tokens while market cap remains constant, XRP could climb to $6.12.
- Optimistic Scenario (Higher Demand): If market cap expands 2.5x to $455 billion and supply halves, XRP could surge to $15.30.
Also Read: XRP Price Faces Critical Test Below $3 Amid Descending Triangle
For comparison, Bitcoin’s halvings have historically boosted prices far beyond a simple 2x move, often creating 2x–4x rallies within a year.
Why XRP Probably Won’t Adopt Halving
Despite the theoretical upside, experts—including Gemini—highlight that such a system is highly unlikely for XRP. Unlike Bitcoin, XRP isn’t mined and has no ongoing issuance. The entire 100 billion supply already exists, with Ripple holding large reserves in escrow.
Instead, the current burn mechanism is practical—it ensures security and smooth operation of the network, rather than fueling speculative scarcity. For Ripple to adopt halving-style events, developers would need to redesign the system’s fundamentals, something considered improbable.