XRP Faces Major Legal Test in Californian Court: Will Ripple Survive July 1st?
XRP News: Ripple has nine days to file a completed Digital Financial Assets Law application with California’s Department of Financial Protection and Innovation, and as of the most recent public records through March 2026...
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XRP News: Ripple has nine days to file a completed Digital Financial Assets Law application with California’s Department of Financial Protection and Innovation, and as of the most recent public records through March 2026, no Ripple entity appears on the DFPI’s list of DFAL applicants.
The company formally engaged the DFPI earlier this year, citing the July 1 deadline by name in written regulatory comments. The public record does not yet show a completed filing to match that engagement.
The distinction matters structurally. July 1 is not a soft guidance date or a suggested compliance window, it is the enactment date for California’s crypto licensing regime under the Digital Financial Assets Law, and the safe harbor provision requires a completed application on file, not a placeholder.
Key date for @Ripple – July 1.
Ripple previously engaged CA's DFPI for a DFAL license noting firms can keep operating if submit by 7/1/26. Public docs through March '26 don't list any Ripple entities, though likely filed. Necessary for all CA offerings, issue/redeem/custody. pic.twitter.com/xfQK4Z3IBc
For Ripple, the immediate consequence is operational: without a filed application or an approved license, RLUSD cannot legally be issued, redeemed, or custodied for California residents after that date. California is the world’s fifth-largest economy. This is not a peripheral market.
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DFAL Explained: What the July 1 Deadline Actually RequiresCalifornia’s Digital Financial Assets Law was originally enacted under AB 39 and subsequently amended.
The operative licensing date was pushed from July 1, 2025 to July 1, 2026 by AB 1934, signed by Governor Gavin Newsom in September 2024, a delay framed explicitly as runway for both regulators and firms to build out compliance infrastructure. That runway closes on July 1, 2026.
The DFPI began accepting DFAL applications via the Nationwide Multistate Licensing System on March 9, 2026. The framework prohibits any entity from engaging in, or even holding itself out as able to engage in, digital financial asset business activity with California residents unless it is licensed, has a completed application on file, or qualifies for a specific exemption.
That “holding out” language is broad: marketing materials, app availability, and website offerings directed at Californians can trigger DFAL obligations before a single transaction occurs.
July 1 is a major deadline for Ripple and the broader crypto industry.
California's Digital Financial Assets Law (DFAL) takes effect on July 1, 2026.
Any company that exchanges, transfers, stores, or manages digital assets for California residents must either:
Hold a… pic.twitter.com/vD29ORD4gp
The compliance cost is not trivial. The DFAL application fee runs $7,500 plus DFPI’s reasonable review costs, and a completed filing must include corporate structure documentation, financials, AML and CTF programs, governance frameworks, information security policies, and consumer protection disclosures.
Firms that miss the deadline and continue serving California residents face cease-and-desist orders, civil penalties, and potential criminal exposure under the California Financial Code, enforcement tools the DFPI has explicit authority to deploy.
For RLUSD specifically, the covered activities, issuance, redemption, and custody, are the core of Ripple’s stablecoin business. There is no partial compliance path here. The federal-level crypto regulatory calendar is adding further pressure on firms already managing multiple jurisdictional deadlines simultaneously.
XRP News: Ripple Engaged DFPI, But Has No License Application on Public RecordThe gap between Ripple’s regulatory posture and its verifiable compliance record is the analytical center of this story. Ripple submitted formal written comments to the DFPI earlier in 2026, addressed to DFPI Regulations Coordinator Diana Pha.
In that letter, the company confirmed it understood the July 1 deadline, expressed support for the DFAL framework, and requested a specific amendment to Section 80.3002(a)(5) of the proposed regulations – asking that any entity holding a DFAL license be explicitly covered under that section, eliminating a requirement to maintain a separate Money Transmitter License in parallel.
That argument is substantively sound. Ripple currently holds more than 40 money transmitter licenses across the United States and is chartered as a limited purpose trust company by the New York Department of Financial Services, which directly regulates RLUSD.
Photo: California DepartmentRipple’s position, that DFAL’s background check and oversight standards are in many cases more rigorous than a standard MTL, making dual licensing redundant, reflects the kind of engagement from a firm that understands what it is filing into.
The problem is that engagement in rulemaking and submission of a completed license application are two different acts.
XRP analyst WrathofKahneman flagged this discrepancy on June 19, 2026, noting that public DFPI documentation through March 2026 does not list any Ripple entity among DFAL applicants. His post drew 13,487 views and 88 reposts.
WrathofKahneman was careful to note that a non-appearance in public records does not confirm Ripple has not filed, filings may not yet be reflected in public disclosures, and assessed an application as likely given Ripple’s direct DFPI engagement. That is the accurate epistemic position. What the record shows is awareness and active participation in rulemaking. What it does not yet show is a completed application.
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The post XRP Faces Major Legal Test in Californian Court: Will Ripple Survive July 1st? appeared first on Cryptonews.
Why this matters
XRP is showing up inside the Regulation theme, so this story is worth tracking for follow-through rather than treating it as a one-off headline.
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