Ripple unveiled a comprehensive four-stage roadmap on April 20 aimed at safeguarding the XRP Ledger from future quantum computing threats. With Phase 2 testing already in progress, the company is targeting full implementation of post-quantum cryptography by 2028. In parallel, SoFi enabled XRP deposits for retail users during the same week.
Summary
Ripple introduced a four-phase strategy to transition to post-quantum cryptography, with Phase 2 currently testing NIST-approved algorithms in collaboration with Project Eleven.
The plan also outlines a “Quantum-Day” fallback in Phase 1, designed to immediately disable traditional signatures and shift users to quantum-secure accounts if existing cryptography is compromised earlier than expected.
The XRP Ledger’s built-in key rotation provides a key advantage over Ethereum and Bitcoin, enabling users to upgrade cryptographic keys without transferring funds or changing accounts.
Ripple’s roadmap follows growing concerns about quantum risks. According to internal leadership, the threat has evolved from theoretical to increasingly plausible, making timely preparation essential. The plan aims to fully prepare the network by 2028, partly in response to findings from Google Quantum AI suggesting that large-scale quantum systems could eventually break the encryption securing most blockchain wallets.
Four-Phase Plan to Secure XRPL
The roadmap is built around maintaining network performance while preparing for potential early quantum threats. Phase 1 introduces an emergency protocol that would halt classical signatures and guide users toward quantum-safe accounts using zero-knowledge verification.
Phase 2, currently underway in early 2026, involves testing standardized post-quantum algorithms under real network conditions, measuring their impact on efficiency and scalability. Engineer Denis Angell has already deployed ML-DSA quantum-resistant signatures on XRPL’s AlphaNet as part of this process.
Phase 3, expected later in 2026, will roll out candidate quantum-safe signatures on Devnet alongside existing systems for developer testing. Finally, Phase 4 envisions a full network upgrade by 2028 through a formal amendment, enabling native post-quantum security across the ledger.
Why XRPL Has an Edge
The XRP Ledger’s architecture offers notable migration advantages. Its native key rotation allows users to update cryptographic credentials without moving assets or creating new accounts—something not natively supported on Ethereum. This reduces friction and risk during large-scale upgrades.
Additionally, XRPL’s deterministic key generation supports coordinated, network-wide transitions without requiring manual action from every user. Project Eleven is assisting Ripple with validator testing, benchmarking, and developing quantum-secure custody solutions as part of Phase 2.
Wider Implications for Crypto
Ripple’s initiative stands out as one of the most detailed quantum-readiness plans in the blockchain sector. Industry experts, including advisors linked to Coinbase, have warned that transitioning to quantum-safe systems across crypto infrastructure could take years once standards are finalized.
While Bitcoin developers remain divided on migration strategies, Ethereum is targeting a longer-term transition timeline around 2029. Meanwhile, XRP saw a brief price uptick following the announcement before stabilizing.
Ripple emphasized that its 2028 goal depends on successful testing phases, ecosystem coordination, and final approval of network upgrades—factors that could influence the overall timeline.



