European Banking Steps Onto Blockchain Rails With Ripple-AMINA Partnership
Ripple has taken a major step into Europe’s banking sector, securing Switzerland’s AMINA Bank as the first EU-based institution to adopt its blockchain payments infrastructure.
Rather than targeting remittance firms or fintechs – as Ripple has traditionally done – the company is now anchoring its expansion in regulated banking. AMINA will plug into Ripple Payments to move money across borders within seconds, bypassing the slower and more expensive correspondent banking networks that still dominate international settlement.
For Ripple, winning over a fully licensed European bank signals a shift in how established institutions perceive blockchain rails. AMINA’s integration effectively becomes a proof point that regulated players in MiCA-governed Europe are ready to experiment with alternative settlement systems, particularly ones that offer lower friction and faster execution.
The timing strengthens Ripple’s broader institutional pitch: as tokenization and digital-payment infrastructure expand across Europe, banks are searching for tools that streamline global payments without compromising compliance.
AMINA positions itself early in that trend, while Ripple gains an influential foothold in a region that regulators are rapidly formalizing into one of the world’s most structured crypto jurisdictions.
If other European banks follow AMINA’s lead, Ripple Payments could see accelerated adoption-especially in corridors where traditional settlement remains slow, costly, or fragmented-marking a turning point in blockchain’s move from niche utility to operational banking infrastructure.

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