XRP, the native token of the XRP Ledger and one of the longest-standing cryptocurrencies on the market, has come a long way since its humble beginnings. According to CoinMarketCap, XRP reached an all-time low of $0.002802 on July 7, 2014, nearly 11 years ago.
At a current price of $2.12, XRP is up a staggering 76,312.05% from that low.
Early adopters who invested even small sums at the time would now be sitting on significant returns. For example, a $100 investment in XRP at $0.002802 would be worth over $76,000 today, while a $1,000 investment would be worth more than $763,000.
XRP was launched in 2012, with the XRP Ledger going live in June of that year. In 2011, three engineers — David Schwartz, Jed McCaleb and Arthur Britto — began developing the XRP Ledger (XRPL).
The three developers continued their effort to create a distributed ledger that addressed Bitcoin's core shortcomings, initially dubbing the code "Ripple." The ledger included a digital asset originally known as "ripples" (XRP as the currency code) to adhere to the same naming standard as Bitcoin.
At press time, XRP was trading down 3.39% in the last 24 hours to $2.12, part of a broader market sell-off that had wiped out $228 million in leveraged positions.
Although XRP remains in red across the daily, weekly and monthly time frames, it remains higher at 345% on a yearly basis.
The Ripple-SEC lawsuit impacted the XRP price, with it embarking on a multi-year-long consolidation. The trend reversed last November, when XRP started rising, reaching a seven-year high of $3.40 in January 2025.
With XRP above $2, it is more than three times higher than its base price before the sharp rally in November 2024, with cycle dip buyers sitting on over 300% gains.