Most XRP investors have no idea where they rank among millions of holders worldwide.
The XRP Rich List is a publicly visible, real-time ranking of every wallet on the XRP Ledger, sorted by balance — and in 2026, it covers more than 6.7 million addresses worldwide.
Whether you're trying to understand whale activity, check your own standing, or simply learn how XRP is distributed across the network — this guide covers it all.
- New to XRP? Understand what XRP is before exploring the rich list data.
Key Takeaways
The XRP Rich List is a publicly accessible, real-time ranking of every wallet on the XRP Ledger, sorted by balance.
XRP has a fixed total supply of 100 billion tokens — no more can ever be created, and roughly 61 billion are currently in circulation.
Ripple Labs is the largest XRP holder overall — it originally placed 55 billion XRP into escrow in 2017 and currently controls approximately 40.6 billion XRP across escrow and operational wallets.
Holding approximately 2,200–2,500 XRP is enough to rank in the top 10% of all XRP wallet addresses globally.
The top 10 addresses control approximately 19–20% of circulating supply — but many are exchange wallets holding pooled customer deposits, not single individuals.
Rich list data shows wallet distribution, not ownership identity — institutional investors often hold XRP through custodians that never appear on the public list.
The XRP Rich List is a ranked index of all wallet addresses on the XRP Ledger, ordered from the largest balance to the smallest.
It's powered entirely by on-chain data — meaning every entry is publicly verifiable by anyone, at any time, without needing permission.
One important nuance: a single wallet address is not always a single person.
Large exchange wallets hold pooled customer deposits, meaning a single address can represent the combined balances of many individual users rather than one entity.
When you look at the XRP Rich List today, one name dominates above all others: Ripple Labs.
If you include those escrow wallets, 7 out of the top 10 largest wallets belong to Ripple.
Beyond Ripple, centralized exchange wallets fill the upper tiers of the list.
The cold wallets of the largest exchanges collectively hold billions of XRP on behalf of their users — but these are not proprietary holdings; they represent the combined balances of retail investors.
Chris Larsen, Ripple's co-founder and executive chairman, is the most prominent identified individual holder — on-chain analysis has linked multiple wallets holding an estimated 2.5 to 2.7 billion XRP to addresses associated with him, though the exact amount under his current control has not been publicly confirmed.
Several other large wallets remain completely anonymous — holding hundreds of millions of XRP with no publicly known owner.
This is the section most XRP holders actually care about — and the data might surprise you.
Holding approximately 2,200 to 2,500 XRP places an investor inside the top 10% of XRP holders globally.
That's a meaningful threshold, and one that's within reach for many retail investors building a position gradually.
Checking your position on the XRP rich list takes about 60 seconds.
Here's the fastest method using XRPScan, the leading real-time explorer for the XRP Ledger:
Find your XRP wallet address (this is your public address, not your private key or seed phrase — never share those).
Enter your address in the XRPScan search bar, then compare your total XRP balance against the tier thresholds listed on the balances page to find your approximate percentile.
Your balance will show you exactly where you fall in the distribution.
There's no app to download, no account to create, and no fee — the data is public.
One important note: if you hold XRP on a centralized exchange like MEXC, Coinbase, or Binance, your balance won't appear as its own wallet on the public list.
The exchange holds the XRP in a custodial wallet on your behalf, and that pooled wallet shows up under the exchange's address, not yours.
If you want your personal holdings to appear on the rich list, you need to hold XRP in a self-custodied wallet connected directly to the XRP Ledger.
The top 5% requires between 7,745 and 8,000 XRP, while the top 1% demands at least 46,323 XRP at early 2026 thresholds.
The top 0.1% threshold sits at approximately 295,194 XRP, covering around 7,554 wallets, while the top 0.01% represents fewer than 800 wallets, each holding more than 3.83 million XRP.
These numbers make clear just how concentrated liquidity is at the very top of the XRP Ledger.
The thresholds are not static — they shift as the total wallet count grows.
Between December 2024 and early 2026, total XRP wallets grew from 5.97 million to over 7.8 million — a rise of nearly 30%.
More participants entering the ecosystem means that elite-tier thresholds gradually adjust over time, even if the movement has been modest so far.
Here is the complete XRP holder percentile breakdown as of 2026, pulled from on-chain data via XRPScan.
Most guides only show the top 10% and top 1% thresholds — but the full table tells a more interesting story.
Percentile | Minimum XRP Required | Approx. Wallets in Tier |
Top 10% | ~2,200–2,486 XRP | ~755,000+ wallets |
Top 5% | ~7,745–8,000 XRP | ~382,000 wallets |
Top 2% | ~23,000–23,348 XRP | ~151,000 wallets |
Top 1% | ~46,323–48,087 XRP | ~75,000–76,000 wallets |
Top 0.5% | ~83,000–85,861 XRP | ~37,000 wallets |
Top 0.1% | ~295,194 XRP | ~7,554 wallets |
Top 0.01% | 3.83M+ XRP | fewer than 800 wallets |
A few things jump out immediately.
The gap between the top 10% and top 1% is enormous — roughly a 20x difference in required holdings.
The top 0.01% is basically a closed club: fewer than 800 wallets globally, almost all of which belong to exchanges, Ripple itself, or institutional custodians.
For everyday investors, the useful benchmark is the top 10% line.
At around 2,200 to 2,486 XRP, that threshold sits at roughly $3,200 to $3,600 at early 2026 prices — a position many retail investors can realistically build toward.
That level of concentration looks alarming at first — but a large portion of it is exchange custody, not individual whale accumulation.
When a single exchange wallet holds that much XRP, it represents pooled customer deposits — not one person making a market move.
The XRP wallet distribution data reveals something that catches most people off guard — the vast majority of XRP holders own very little.
More than 3.7 million wallets on the XRP Ledger hold under 500 XRP.
Over 1.3 million of those wallets hold under 20 XRP — a combined total representing a tiny fraction of the overall supply.
Meanwhile, the top tier looks like this: just five wallets hold more than 1 billion XRP each, collectively accounting for over 7.4 billion XRP.
That creates an extreme right-skew in the distribution — a shape where the average wallet balance looks far larger than what most holders actually own, because a handful of giant wallets drag the mean upward.
What this means practically: if you hold 500 XRP, you're already ahead of the majority of all active addresses on the ledger.
Large wallet movements on the XRP Ledger do get monitored closely by traders.
When a dormant wallet holding hundreds of millions of XRP suddenly moves funds toward an exchange, that gets noticed — but it doesn't always mean a sell-off is coming.
Institutional investors often hold XRP through custodians or financial products that never appear on the public rich list at all.
That's worth remembering before drawing conclusions from raw holder data alone.
Q: Who is the richest XRP holder?
Ripple Labs is the largest entity overall, controlling tens of billions of XRP across escrow and operational wallets combined.
Q: How much XRP do I need to be in the top 10% of holders?
Approximately 2,200 to 2,500 XRP currently places a wallet in the top 10% of all XRP addresses on the ledger.
Q: What is the minimum amount of XRP needed to appear on the rich list?
Q: How do I use the XRP rich list as a calculator to find my rank?
Q: Is the XRP rich list exposed to public view?
Yes — all XRP Ledger data is fully public and accessible to anyone through explorers like XRPScan and Bithomp without registration.
Q: How often is the XRP rich list updated?
XRPScan and similar explorers update the rich list in real time as new transactions are confirmed on the XRP Ledger.
Q: Is there an XLM rich list similar to the XRP rich list?
Yes — Stellar (XLM) has a similar on-chain distribution tracker since both XRP and XLM run on public ledgers. Stellar's explorer at stellar.expert provides a ranking of top XLM wallets, comparable in function to XRPScan for XRP holders.
The XRP Rich List is one of the most transparent datasets in all of crypto — and it rewards people who know how to read it.
It shows you where power sits in the XRP ecosystem, who the largest holders are, and where your own wallet stands relative to millions of others worldwide.
The full percentile tier table in this guide gives you an exact benchmark — and the wallet distribution data shows just how far ahead of the pack even a modest XRP position can place you.
If you're looking to build or grow your XRP holdings, MEXC offers XRP trading with a straightforward onboarding process for new investors.