Ripple’s RLUSD stablecoin has gained a new route into Cardano, adding another small but notable step in the broader race to make stablecoins less dependent on a single chain.
Wanchain said in a post on X that its cross-chain bridge now supports RLUSD, giving users the ability to move the stablecoin directly from the XRP Ledger to Cardano. The setup also supports bridging from Ethereum to Cardano, widening the number of paths through which RLUSD can reach the network.
That is the core of the update. Cardano users are not only getting a new stablecoin option in theory, but a live bridge route from two of the ecosystems where RLUSD already circulates.
Wanchain said users can bridge RLUSD from either XRPL or Ethereum into Wanchain, then route it onward to Cardano. That makes the integration more flexible than a simple one-lane connection. It also reduces the need to rely on a single origin network or a more cumbersome workaround to get the asset into Cardano-based environments.
In practical terms, that matters because stablecoin usage tends to grow where access is easy, not only where the branding is strong. If users can move an asset smoothly across multiple networks, its chances of finding real liquidity and use cases improve.
The bridge also supports transfers in the other direction. Wanchain said RLUSD can move from XRPL to Ethereum, which gives the token another interoperability link beyond Cardano alone.
That may prove just as important as the Cardano angle itself. Stablecoins increasingly compete not only on reserves, regulation or issuer reputation, but on how widely they can travel across ecosystems without friction.
For RLUSD, the integration suggests Ripple-linked infrastructure is slowly widening the token’s reach beyond its home environment. For Cardano, it brings in another dollar-pegged asset through an external bridge rather than a native issuance.
Neither point is especially dramatic on its own. Still, stablecoin adoption often builds through these smaller infrastructure steps first. A bridge appears, liquidity follows if there is demand, and only later does the market decide whether the asset has actually found a foothold.
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