Ripple is urging the SEC to overhaul crypto oversight by launching real-world sandboxes that fast-track innovation, reveal regulatory gaps, and future-proof U.S. digital finance.
Ripple Tells SEC Sandboxes Must Reflect Live Conditions to Guide Crypto Regulation
Ripple submitted a proposal to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Crypto Task Force on May 28, 2025, advocating for the development of regulatory sandboxes to support the growth of digital assets. The company asserted:
We believe a regulatory sandbox for digital asset products, like tokenized Real World Assets (RWAs), allows digital asset markets, innovative products, and value-creating services to operate in a controlled environment while subject to regulatory oversight.
This, the letter argued, would give regulators and companies a means to collaborate in real time and identify areas where existing financial rules may fall short.
The submission emphasized that sandboxes can serve as a “practical mechanism for both regulators and market participants to understand how emerging technologies interact with existing frameworks, highlighting where current regulations may be ineffective or where additional guidance may be needed.”
Rather than relying on small-scale pilots, the company recommended building testing environments that closely mirror live markets. The crypto firm detailed:
Regulatory sandboxes should go beyond limited, small-scale pilots. They should simulate production-like conditions, enabling firms to test products and infrastructure under circumstances that closely mirror real market environments.
“This includes testing with actual customer cohorts, real transaction volumes, and, in relevant cases, cross-border operational elements,” Ripple noted.
To support its argument, Ripple highlighted case studies from other jurisdictions. Singapore’s Project Guardian, the European Blockchain Regulatory Sandbox, and the UK’s Digital Securities Sandbox were cited as examples of successful frameworks that blend innovation with regulatory oversight. These initiatives, the letter noted, have contributed to more responsive financial rules and enhanced institutional readiness. The company urged the SEC to consider similar mechanisms in the U.S. to help regulators and innovators develop policy collaboratively and support the transition of sandbox-tested solutions into regulated markets.
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