EXPLORE: Next Crypto to Explode in 2026
XRP News today revolves around the fixCleanup3_1_3 amendment, which entered its two-week activation window on May 13, 2026, and locks into the XRP Ledger permanently on May 27, with roughly 40% of validators still running outdated software as of May 18.
That is not a minor coordination issue. Validators that have not upgraded by that deadline face amendment blocking, meaning they are cut off from consensus entirely and cannot participate in validating transactions.
The open question the market now has to answer is whether the protocol maturity this amendment delivers, bundling fixes for NFTs, Permissioned Domains, Vaults, and the Lending Protocol, is enough to convert institutional accumulation into a sustained price breakout.
The Clawback Amendment is not a mechanism that touches XRP itself. That distinction matters for investors who may misread it as a tool that gives any party authority over XRP holdings. It is not.
The AMM Clawback amendment, which went live in January 2025, applies exclusively to issued tokens, assets that third-party issuers create on the XRP Ledger, such as Ripple’s RLUSD stablecoin. It introduced a dedicated AMMClawback transaction type that lets compliant issuers recover tokens from AMM pools in specific legal or fraud-related scenarios.
Why does this XRP news matter for DeFi? Because it is the compliance bridge that regulated institutions need before they will commit capital to on-chain liquidity pools. Without clawback capability, a bank or regulated asset manager cannot issue a tokenized asset on XRPL and place it into an XRPL AMM pool; the legal exposure is uncontrollable. With it, the AMM becomes a venue for compliant liquidity, not just permissionless trading.
The Clawback Amendment is the prerequisite for RLUSD and future real-world asset tokens to participate in XRPL’s native automated market maker infrastructure at an institutional scale.
The fixCleanup3_1_3 amendment extends this logic further. It bundles stability and security fixes across NFTs, Permissioned Domains, and the Lending Protocol that launched with XRPL v3.1.0 – the same version that introduced Single Asset Vaults and structured credit primitives behind validator-gated amendments.
Each of these features is designed to deepen XRPL’s DeFi surface area: vaults enable collateralization, the lending protocol enables on-chain credit, and permissioned domains allow issuers to restrict token transfers to verified counterparties. The cleanup amendment makes those features production-grade.
EXPLORE: Next Crypto to Explode in 2026
The 80% validator consensus threshold is not an abstract governance metric. It is a timing mechanism with direct market implications. For an amendment to activate on the XRP Ledger, it must sustain support from at least 80% of trusted validators for a continuous 14-day window.
The moment that window opens, which happened on May 13 for fixCleanup3_1_3, sophisticated participants begin positioning for activation, because the outcome is now probabilistically deterministic rather than speculative.
The risk embedded in the current cycle is the 40% non-upgrade rate as of May 18. That figure means a large portion of the validator set is running software that will become incompatible with the network on May 27.
Prior upgrade cycles saw similar warnings; validator Jon Nilsen publicly flagged that operators not on v2.6.2 risked amendment blocking when the fixDirectoryLimit amendment was activated, and the network ultimately coordinated in time.
The question is whether the same coordination happens before May 27 or whether a subset of validators gets blocked, creating short-term uncertainty that pressures price.
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The post XRP News: 40% of XRP Ledger Validators Have Not Upgraded With 9 Days Until the Deadline, What Happens If They Miss It? appeared first on icobench.com.


