Search this question and you'll get a confident number.
You'll see the same number on the next site, and the one after that.
None of them can tell you where it came from.
This guide covers what the XRP Ledger actually shows, what it can't show, and how to find where you personally rank.
Key Takeaways
Nobody knows exactly how many people own XRP. The XRP Ledger counts addresses rather than people, and the two differ in both directions at once.
One person can own many addresses, while a single exchange address can hold balances for millions of customers — so the count is both too high and too low, by amounts nobody can measure.
The widely repeated figure of 18 to 25 million XRP holders has no traceable source and circulates between sites without an origin.
Abandoned addresses are never removed from the ledger, so the activated address count only ever goes up.
If you hold XRP on an exchange, you have no address at all — you're identified by a destination tag inside a shared one.
The honest answer is that nobody knows, and the reason is structural.
It does not record who owns them.
There is no name, no country, and no identity attached to any balance on the ledger — by design.
So every count of XRP owners is really a count of addresses, adjusted by guesswork.
The guesswork runs in two directions at the same time.
Some people own several addresses.
A trader might keep one for long-term storage, one for trading, and one for testing.
Count the addresses and you count that person three times.
Meanwhile, most people who own XRP have no address at all.
They bought it on an exchange, and the exchange holds everyone's XRP together in addresses it controls.
Count the addresses and you count millions of those people as one.
These two errors do not cancel out.
Both are large, both are unmeasured, and they push opposite ways.
That's why the real number is a range nobody can narrow.
Look at what happens when you try to trace one of these figures.
Search this question and you'll keep meeting the same range: 18 to 25 million holders.
It appears on exchange blogs, on research pages, and in AI-generated answers, always attributed to "estimates" or "industry data" and never to anyone in particular.
Follow it back far enough and there is no study, no methodology, and no first source — just sites quoting the shape of each other's confidence.
The figure you'll see quoted | What it actually counts | What it leaves out |
Activated addresses | Every address ever funded on the ledger, including ones abandoned years ago | Everyone who holds XRP on an exchange |
Active addresses | Addresses that sent or received during a set window | Long-term holders who never move their XRP |
"X million XRP holders" | Nothing traceable — the figure circulates between sites with no named origin | Not applicable: there is nothing underneath it to leave out |
An address on the XRP Ledger is not free.
That reserve is a price, and the price has been cut twice.
In effect from | Base reserve — the cost to open one address | Owner reserve per item |
Until September 2021 | 20 XRP | 5 XRP |
| 10 XRP | 2 XRP |
| 1 XRP | 0.2 XRP |
Look at what happened on December 2, 2024.
The cost of creating an address dropped by 90% overnight.
Addresses got cheaper, and the address count climbed.
That is not the same thing as more people buying XRP, though the two are easy to confuse.
There's a second effect, and it only pushes one way.
An address funded in 2015 and forgotten in 2016 is still counted today, still sitting at whatever the reserve was back then.
The count of activated addresses only ever rises, whether or not anyone is behind them.
This is the half of the picture on-chain data can't reach, and it's the half we deal with every day.
When you buy XRP on MEXC, we don't create an address for you.
Your balance is a line in our books.
Read that again, because it's the whole point.
Every MEXC customer holding XRP sits behind one address.
So how do we know which XRP is yours?
Now look at what that does to every rich list you've ever read.
They spot a large exchange address near the top and set it aside as "not a real holder."
The addresses standing in for the most actual people are the ones getting deleted from the count of people.
We watch the other distortion happen in real time too.
When a customer withdraws XRP to self-custody, a new address gets created.
When they later deposit it all back, the address stays behind, sitting at the reserve minimum forever.
Every withdraw-and-return cycle leaves one more hollow address on the ledger and one more invisible owner in our books.
That isn't a theory about how exchanges work.
It's the flow we process, and neither end of it reaches an explorer.
Most people arrive at this topic with one question: where do I stand?
It's answerable — just not the way most articles answer it.
You'll find plenty of sites with a tidy table: top 10% needs this much, top 1% needs that much.
The numbers are usually wrong, and the reason is the denominator.
A percentile is a ratio.
The bottom of that ratio is every address on the ledger — including the abandoned ones, the ones created for 1 XRP since December 2024, and the ones sitting untouched at a reserve minimum from a decade ago.
Millions of the addresses you're being ranked against are not people.
They're leftovers.
So a headline like "holding 2,200 XRP puts you in the top 10%" is really reporting how many cheap and abandoned addresses exist.
It isn't telling you how much XRP a committed holder tends to own.
Cut the reserve again and that figure moves, without a single person buying or selling anything.
The rankings are also live.
Any threshold printed in an article was out of date before you read it.
You don't need anyone's table.
The ledger is public, and you can look yourself up.
No account, no signup, no private key.
You'll see your exact balance and where it sits against every other address, as of the ledger that just closed.
If your XRP is on an exchange, this won't work — and that's the whole point of the section above.
You don't have an address to look up.
Your balance lives in the exchange's books, and the ledger has never heard of you.
One habit worth building: check the same figure twice, a month apart.
Watching your percentile move while your balance stays identical is the fastest way to understand what these rankings actually measure.
"How many people own 1,000 XRP?" is one of the most common questions about XRP ownership, and it has no honest numerical answer.
What it does have is a better frame.
Measure yourself against the supply instead of against the crowd.
If you hold | Share of XRP's fixed 100 billion supply | Will this figure ever change? |
1,000 XRP | One hundred-millionth | No |
5,000 XRP | One twenty-millionth | No |
10,000 XRP | One ten-millionth | No |
50,000 XRP | One two-millionth | No |
Those shares are permanent.
They have to be, because the denominator can't move.
That makes them worth more than a percentile that swings on how many empty addresses got created last month.
The comparison against other holders is the unstable part. The comparison against the supply isn't.
XRP is concentrated, and the concentration is deliberate rather than accidental.
There was no mining, so there was no slow handout to whoever showed up with a machine.
The mechanism matters more than the balance.
That detail is why the escrow never really empties: the leftovers keep rescheduling themselves.
For a smaller holder, the practical read is narrow.
You aren't going to out-vote the escrow, and the release schedule is public, so it isn't a surprise waiting to happen.
The concentration figures that get quoted also count exchange custody addresses as single holders ― which, as covered above, is the exact opposite of what they are.
How many people own XRP?
Nobody knows, because the XRP Ledger records addresses rather than people, and the gap between the two runs in both directions at once.
How many people own XRP in the world?
There is no verified global figure — the widely repeated range of 18 to 25 million traces back to no named source and should be treated as a guess.
How many XRP wallets are there?
The ledger tracks activated addresses rather than wallets or people, and that count only ever rises because abandoned addresses are never removed.
How many people own 1,000 XRP?
No source can tell you, but 1,000 XRP is a permanent one hundred-millionth of XRP's fixed 100 billion supply, which is a steadier way to measure your position than a percentile.
How many people own 5,000 XRP or 10,000 XRP?
The same answer applies: 5,000 XRP is one twenty-millionth of total supply and 10,000 XRP is one ten-millionth, and unlike a percentile, neither figure will ever change.
What percentage of XRP holders own the most?
The top addresses hold a large share of the supply, but much of that is exchange custody standing in for millions of individual customers, so the headline concentration figure overstates how concentrated real ownership is.
Why do different sites give different numbers of XRP holders?
Because each one picks a different definition of "holder" and a different snapshot moment, and most are copying an estimate from another site rather than measuring anything.
Can I see how many people own XRP on the blockchain?
You can see every address and balance, and you can look up your own rank on a ledger explorer in about a minute, but you cannot see people — the ledger has no identity layer.
Who owns the most XRP?
Ripple Labs holds the largest share through the escrow contracts it created in 2017; our XRP Rich List guide covers the top addresses in detail.
The number you came here for doesn't exist, and knowing that is more useful than a made-up figure.
Here's what does exist: a public ledger where every balance is visible, a supply capped at 100 billion that will never move, and a reserve rule that explains why the address count keeps climbing whether or not anyone new shows up.
And here's what will never exist on that ledger: you, if your XRP sits on an exchange.
That's not a gap anyone is going to close, because it isn't a gap — it's how hosted custody was designed to work.
Use the fixed things.
Look up your own address and get a real answer instead of a headline.
And when you next see a site quoting a precise count of XRP owners, you know what to ask.
Where did that number come from?
Most of the time, nobody can tell you.