Ripple Labs Inc. completed its scheduled release of 1 billion XRP from escrow on June 1, 2026, a move that unlocked digital assets worth approximately $1.33 billion based on current market valuations. The massive transfer, tracked by on-chain data service Whale Alert, occurred across three distinct transactions as part of the company’s long-standing programmatic supply management strategy. The 1 billion tokens were distributed in batches of 500 million, 400 million, and 100 million XRP respectively.
The largest of the three transfers, valued at roughly $666 million, was followed by a 400 million token release worth $533 million and a final 100 million XRP transfer at $133 million. While these figures represent a significant portion of the token’s daily volume, the release does not typically equate to a direct market dump. Historically, Ripple returns a substantial majority of the unlocked tokens back into new escrow contracts, effectively extending the timeline for the total supply’s entry into the open market.
This monthly ritual continues to draw scrutiny from investors who monitor how the supply influx affects price stability. At the time of the release, the token was trading at $1.30, a level where XRP speculative activity often increases as buyers and sellers battle for control near major technical resistance zones. The transparency of the escrow system is intended to prevent market manipulation, yet the sheer scale of the holdings remains a point of contention among decentralization advocates.
Brad Garlinghouse and David Schwartz address potential XRP burn
The latest release has reignited debates regarding whether Ripple should permanently destroy its remaining escrowed reserves to boost scarcity. CEO Brad Garlinghouse hasn’t dismissed the possibility of a “burn,” stating he does not rule anything out when it comes to managing the company’s vast holdings. Such a move would drastically alter the token’s supply dynamics, which are currently capped at a hard limit of 100 billion tokens by the XRP Ledger.
However, Ripple Chief Technology Officer David Schwartz has expressed skepticism about the efficacy of burning tokens to drive price appreciation. He cited the 2019 decision by the Stellar Development Foundation to destroy 55 billion XLM—roughly half of its total supply—noting that the move failed to trigger any lasting upward price movement. Schwartz argued that markets often “price in” the existence of these tokens long before they are moved or destroyed.
Beyond a literal burn, David Schwartz explained that the company possesses the technical ability to unilaterally ensure locked tokens never enter circulation. This could be achieved by transferring control of the destination accounts to a “black hole” address or simply choosing never to execute the final sale. The evolving legal environment, including the XRP CLARITY Act legislative progress, may eventually dictate how these treasury assets are handled by the firm.
Current circulating supply and escrow timelines
According to market data from Binance as of early June 2026, approximately 61.85 billion tokens are currently in active circulation. This leaves Ripple in control of roughly 38.15 billion tokens still secured within the escrow system. Because the company routinely re-escrows the majority of its monthly billion-token unlock, the exact date the reserves will be fully exhausted remains a moving target.
The practice of returning unused tokens essentially adds another month to the “back end” of the release schedule. This creates a buffer that allows the company to fund its operations and support ecosystem growth without causing an immediate supply shock. While the fixed ceiling of 100 billion tokens is immutable on the ledger level, the pace at which those tokens reach exchanges is entirely at the discretion of the company’s treasury management.
The ongoing interaction between Ripple’s escrow releases and broader market sentiment remains a critical Factor for long-term holders. As David Schwartz continues to influence the technical direction of the XRPL Foundation, the community is looking for more definitive signals on whether the company will stick to its current distribution plan or pivot toward a more aggressive deflationary model to satisfy investor demands.
