Sending money abroad still means handing it off through a chain of banks, each one adding time and taking a cut. A transfer that should take seconds can take days, and the fees often aren’t clear to the sender or receiver until it’s done.
Ripple introduced On-Demand Liquidity (ODL) to address this bottleneck by using XRP (CRYPTO: XRP) as a bridge between currencies, allowing value to move without the need for pre-funded accounts. Here’s a closer look at how the system works and what it means for the future of global payments.
What Is Ripple’s On-Demand Liquidity (ODL)?

On-Demand Liquidity is a payment service that uses XRP to move money across borders without banks having to pre-load foreign currency in overseas accounts, and that flips the whole transaction model. Instead of money parked idle in a foreign account for days waiting to be used, ODL pulls the liquidity at the exact second a payment is made, using XRP as the connector between two different currencies.
The payment takes three to five seconds. Ripple runs the whole thing through RippleNet, a payment network that now connects more than 300 financial institutions across over 55 countries.
ODL is the specific layer where XRP actually moves, and that distinction matters for anyone trying to understand what the token genuinely does. However, not every institution on RippleNet uses XRP directly. Some use the network purely for messaging.
How Is XRP Used for Cross-Border Payments?

Say a company in the United States needs to send money to a recipient in France. Under the ODL model, the sending company converts US dollars into XRP on a local exchange. That converted XRP then moves across the XRP Ledger in seconds and gets converted into euros on the other end.
The XRP Ledger handles up to 1,500 transactions per second, with fees averaging just $0.0002 per transaction.
How ODL Helps Banks and Payment Companies Reduce Costs

Most international transfers move through a chain of correspondent banks, each taking a fee and adding time to the process. A single SWIFT transfer can cost anywhere from $25 to $50 and take up to five business days to settle. On top of that, banks are required to hold pre-funded accounts in foreign currencies across different countries.
ODL removes the need to keep that idle capital locked in foreign accounts. Liquidity is only used at the moment a payment is made, not held in advance. For banks and payment companies handling thousands of cross-border transactions each day, the savings on fees and settlement time can add up in a way that meaningfully impacts their balance sheet.
Can Ripple’s ODL Service Increase XRP Adoption and Price?

There’s a link between ODL volume and XRP’s price, but not as direct as it sounds. Every payment that runs through an ODL system requires XRP to be purchased on one end and sold on the other. That creates genuine market activity, but because the transactions happen so fast, XRP isn’t held long enough to reduce circulating supply the way a long-term investor holding it would.
That said, as ODL volume grows, the daily transactional demand for XRP grows with it. ODL processed more than $15 billion in cross-border payments in 2024, a 32% year-over-year increase. Cumulative Ripple Payments volume also surpassed $95 billion as of January 2026.
So adoption is clearly moving, but whether that translates into sustained price growth depends on how quickly ODL volume scales compared to the supply of XRP entering the market. At the same time, ODL still carries some concerns around XRP’s price volatility, even though exposure is limited since settlement happens in seconds.
Regulatory pressure has also shaped its rollout, especially in the United States, while other regions such as Singapore, Japan, and the UAE have already granted licenses that support wider expansion for Ripple.
What XRP Investors Should Watch About Ripple’s ODL Expansion
Joining Ripple’s network and using XRP are two different things, and that’s the divide investors should be paying attention to. Right now, only about 40% of Ripple’s 300+ partners actively use XRP for ODL. The rest are on RippleNet purely for messaging and settlement infrastructure. Ripple is also pushing into Africa and the Middle East, where sending money across borders is still very expensive.
With the SEC lawsuit finally settled in 2025, and the CLARITY Act expected to reach the full Senate floor by June, institutions that had been waiting on the sidelines now have a much cleaner regulatory picture to work with. If adoption continues to expand across payment providers and financial institutions, some analysts believe XRP could see significant upside from current levels.
Still, investors should focus less on XRP price targets and more on measurable growth in ODL transaction volume, new payment partnerships, and real-world usage across major transfer markets. Those figures will likely say far more about XRP’s long-term direction than short-term market hype ever could.