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Ripple’s new Dubai headquarters will double its local team, driving deeper market penetration in the Middle East and Africa.
The company’s regulatory wins have enabled it to secure major clients, including Zand Bank and Mamo, in the UAE’s growing fintech sector.
Ripple’s expansion reflects its growing share of global customers in the region, fueled by a series of commercial and regulatory milestones since 2025.

Ripple has opened a new Middle East and Africa regional headquarters in the Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC), creating capacity to double the size of its local team as the company pushes deeper into a region that now accounts for a significant share of its global customer base.

The move, announced on April 30, is less a discrete news event than the operational consequence of a 14-month regulatory streak—and reflects the scale at which Ripple’s MEA business has compounded since it first established its regional headquarters in Dubai in 2020.

Five Milestones in 14 Months

The new office lands on top of a stack of regulatory and commercial wins that have accumulated rapidly since early 2025.

In March 2025, Ripple became the first blockchain-enabled payments provider to be fully licensed by the Dubai Financial Services Authority (DFSA), allowing it to deliver regulated cross-border digital payment services from within the DIFC — the UAE free zone with its own legal framework hosting more than 7,000 global firms.

Within months, the commercial flywheel started turning. In May 2025, Ripple announced Zand Bank — the UAE’s first AI-powered digital bank, which is preparing an AED-backed stablecoin — and fintech Mamo as its first two blockchain-enabled payments clients in the country. In June 2025, the DFSA approved RLUSD, Ripple’s dollar-backed stablecoin, as a recognized crypto token, enabling its use by regulated firms across the DIFC. In July 2025, Ripple’s institutional custody arm partnered with Ctrl Alt to provide secure storage for tokenized real estate title deeds issued on the XRP Ledger as part of the Dubai Land Department’s Real Estate Tokenization Project.

The April 30 headquarters expansion is the fifth major MEA milestone in this sequence—and the first one that’s purely operational rather than regulatory or commercial. It signals that the previous four have generated enough business volume to require it.

Doubling Down on People, Not Just Infrastructure

The new DIFC office “creates capacity to grow its local team as demand for regulated blockchain-powered payment and custody solutions continues to accelerate across the region,” per Ripple’s announcement. The headline detail is the doubling of headcount—a commitment that’s atypical for a crypto-native firm in 2026, where most digital asset companies have been trimming workforces or holding them flat.

“In recent years the Middle East has become an increasingly vital driver of Ripple’s global growth. Our new regional headquarters is a reflection of our ongoing commitment to playing our part in the region’s upward trajectory,” said Reece Merrick, Managing Director, Middle East and Africa at Ripple. “From our earliest days in the UAE, we have seen first-hand the appetite from local businesses for regulated, blockchain-powered payment infrastructure, an appetite that is only growing.”

His Excellency Arif Amiri, Chief Executive Officer at DIFC Authority, framed the expansion as institutional validation: “Ripple’s expansion within DIFC is a strong signal of the confidence that world-leading digital asset firms have in Dubai as a global hub for blockchain technology. Since establishing its regional headquarters here, Ripple has been a model for how digital asset firms can operate with both ambition and accountability.”

The Customer Base That Justified the Expansion

The clients Ripple cited in its announcement form a deliberate cross-section of what the company is selling and to whom:

  • Zand Bank—UAE-licensed AI-powered digital bank, Ripple Payments customer, and the entity preparing an AED-backed stablecoin that would join RLUSD on Ripple’s payments rails.
  • Mamo—UAE-based fintech serving the country’s small business and consumer segment, uses Ripple Payments for cross-border transfers.
  • Ctrl Alt—Custody partner deploying Ripple’s institutional custody technology to store tokenized real estate title deeds for the Dubai Land Department.
  • Garanti BBVA — Turkish banking group that previously announced a collaboration with Ripple and IBM.
  • Absa Bank — South African banking group using Ripple Custody for African expansion.
  • Chipper Cash — African crypto-enabled payments fintech.

The list spans three customer types—banks, fintechs, and tokenization infrastructure providers—and three geographies (UAE, sub-Saharan Africa, and Turkey). The breadth is the point: it’s not concentrated bets; it’s diversification within a region.

What’s Next

Ripple Payments globally now operates in over 90 payout markets and has processed more than $70 billion in volume, with the platform live in Dubai, the U.S., Brazil, Mexico, Australia, and Switzerland. RLUSD’s market cap has grown materially since launch in late December 2024, having surpassed $130 million by Ripple’s March 2025 DFSA license disclosure and continuing to expand.

The MEA expansion sits within a broader 2025–2026 Ripple corporate posture that includes the $1.25 billion Hidden Road acquisition (the prime brokerage firm), the $200 million Rail acquisition (stablecoin payments platform), and continued international license accumulation—Ripple now holds more than 60 regulatory licenses globally.

For the UAE, the expansion confirms Dubai’s positioning as the regional capital of regulated digital asset finance. For Ripple, it confirms that the regulatory groundwork laid in 2024 and early 2025 has produced the customer pipeline that justifies operational scaling—and that the Middle East, not the United States, has become the region where Ripple’s enterprise blockchain thesis is finding the cleanest institutional adoption path.

The Swell conference, Ripple’s flagship industry event, returns in 2026—and given the trajectory, Dubai will likely feature prominently on its agenda.

Also Read: Ripple’s RLUSD Stablecoin Goes Live on OKX in Major Liquidity Push

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