XRP Will Hit $3 in 2026

  • XRP has a few drivers in play that will likely boost its price in 2026.

  • Ripple could also help by promoting the capabilities it procured in 2025.

  • Consistently increasing traction is probably going to be more relevant than big catalysts this year.

  • 10 stocks we like better than XRP ›

I predict that XRP (CRYPTO: XRP) will hit at least $3 at some point in 2026, and I additionally predict that many holders will find the journey ahead to be a touch more tedious than what one would normally anticipate, given that the asset’s price is currently near $2.15.

Here’s why I think that my price target will prove to be true before the start of 2027.

An investor sits at a desk and considers a computer with a stock chart.
Image source: Getty Images.

XRP already printed an all-time high of $3.65 in 2025. So there’s nothing impossible about its price returning to the $3.00 level or higher, and, depending on how you look at it, my price target might not even be considered that ambitious. But what might actually drive the movement upward?

One of the most important things to watch is whether smart contract activity on the XRP Ledger’s (XRPL’s) Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM) sidechain starts to look like a real developer ecosystem for decentralized applications (dApps) rather than a curiosity. For reference, the sidechain is a separate blockchain that stays connected to a main chain, but runs Ethereum-style smart contracts so that developers can reuse tools and code rather than having to learn a new stack. The XRPL’s sidechain launched in mid-2025, so 2026 is when investors get to see whether it’s actually used for anything meaningful.

As of Jan. 8, less than $50,000 in total value locked (TVL) was hosted on XRP’s EVM sidechain, which is to say that it’s not really being used by anyone with any notable amount of capital. If that starts to change as a result of Ripple promoting it to users in financial institutions or elsewhere, the chances are good that XRP’s price will grind upward in some ratio with the sidechain’s usage.

Another key driver is whether Ripple’s strategy starts gaining traction with institutional investors, as that’ll be hard for competitors to copy.

To that end, Ripple, the business responsible for XRP, has consistently been moving toward a more bank-like posture, including a reported application for a U.S. national bank charter and a pursuit of a Federal Reserve master account for custody infrastructure tied to its stablecoin efforts. The more Ripple can position itself as the place for banks and currency exchange houses to do their business on the blockchain, the higher XRP will run — but that’s going to be a slow process that moves in fits and starts, assuming it continues to happen at all. Expect a few announcements regarding new pilot programs with financial institutions to provide minor bumps to the coin’s price, but don’t expect any one announcement to send it to the moon, because its market cap is simply too large for that to happen now.

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