The XRP Ledger has activated a new “Authorized DEX” amendment, a technical upgrade designed to allow regulated institutions to trade on XRPL without opening the markets to everyone.
The change, known as XLS-81, allows for the creation of permissioned decentralized exchanges that operate like XRPL’s existing integrated DEX, but with one key difference.
An authorized domain can restrict who is allowed to place bids and who is allowed to accept them, creating a closed trading platform where participation can be tied to compliance requirements such as KYC and AML checks.
Think of it as a members-only marketplace, while still retaining the native ledger trading mechanics.
The feature is aimed at banks, brokers and other businesses that want on-chain settlement and liquidity but cannot interact with fully open DeFi markets. For these actors, the ability to control access is not optional but constitutes a minimum requirement.
The activation also adds to a growing set of “institutional DeFi” primitives that XRPL has rolled out this month. Token Escrow, or XLS-85, went live last week, extending XRPL’s native escrow system beyond XRP to all trustline-based tokens and multi-purpose tokens, including stablecoins such as RLUSD and real-world tokenized assets.
Together, the two upgrades create a more comprehensive toolkit for regulated finance on XRPL. Token escrow allows conditional settlement of assets issued on the network, while the permissioned DEX provides a controlled venue to trade them.
This combination is essential for use cases such as tokenized funds, FX stablecoin rails, and regulated secondary markets for tokenized assets.
While these changes are unlikely to be material to most day-to-day retail traders, they do signal the direction of XRPL. It’s all about building infrastructure for institutions first, even if that means relying on closed markets rather than the fully open DeFi model that defined the last cycle.


