Ripple Backs $6M Squid Raise to Push XRP Ledger Into More Than 100 Blockchains With $6B Routed Volume

Ripple has joined a $6M funding round for Squid, strengthening efforts to embed the XRP Ledger into a leading cross-chain router already live across at least 100 blockchains and processing over $6B in routed volume. 

Source: Shutterstock
Source: Shutterstock

Ripple’s $6M Bet on Squid Signals a Bigger XRP Ledger Interoperability Push 

Ripple has deepened its push into cross-chain infrastructure with a $6 million investment in Squid, a routing protocol already spanning more than 100 blockchains and processing over $6 billion in routed transactions. Other key investors in the funding include Dialectic, Borderless, Scenius Capital, Altos, and Arche Capital. 

The move goes beyond a typical funding round. It signals Ripple’s intent to embed the XRP Ledger (XRPL) into the emerging interoperability layer that is steadily reshaping how blockchains connect and exchange value.

Squid’s core innovation is its intent-based execution model, which removes the need for manual bridging. 

Instead of users moving assets step by step between networks, they simply define what they want to do, and the system automatically handles routing, liquidity sourcing, and settlement through market makers and Trusted Execution Environments. 

What is the result? Well, a smoother experience where a single transaction can move across ecosystems like Ethereum, Solana, Bitcoin, Cosmos, and XRPL without friction or platform switching.

Ripple’s XRPL Ecosystem Comes into Play

For Ripple, the investment reflects a broader strategy of positioning XRPL not as a standalone ecosystem, but as a settlement and liquidity layer within a multi-chain environment.

As interoperability becomes the industry standard, value is shifting toward protocols that unify fragmented liquidity rather than compete in isolation.

Squid’s traction, millions of transactions and growing enterprise interest, suggests that demand for seamless cross-chain execution is already material. As a result, the new funding is expected to accelerate its move toward more consumer-facing applications, making cross-chain activity increasingly invisible to end users.

At a wider level, the direction is becoming clear. Capital is flowing toward infrastructure that abstracts complexity and connects ecosystems rather than separating them. Ripple’s participation in Squid is less about a single integration and more about ensuring XRPL sits inside the pathways where cross-chain value is routed.

If this trajectory continues, the future of blockchain may look less like competing networks, and more like a single, interconnected routing system where XRP Ledger is one of the embedded settlement layers powering it, especially given that the XRPL recently broke into the top 4 RWA chains.