XRP has tended to perform well over the long term.
Over the short term, it tends to be very volatile.
It shouldn't be the main savings vehicle for anyone's retirement plans.
Retirement portfolios need to grow steadily, survive downturns, and be there in the time period when you expect to need the money.
For decades, most investors turned to some blend of stocks, bonds, and perhaps a sprinkle of commodities to accomplish those goals. More recently, gaining exposure to crypto has become common, though often logistically burdensome. Now, leading coins like XRP (CRYPTO: XRP) are quite easy to buy through retirement accounts.
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But is XRP itself actually a worthwhile asset to buy if you're saving for retirement? Let's look at whether it fits into this framework, and if so, how much it makes sense to purchase.
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XRP is the native token of the XRP Ledger (XRPL), a blockchain that was originally built for fast, low-cost cross-border payments, but which is now being developed for a variety of other financial tasks that financial institutions tend to need to perform, like sourcing liquidity and settlement for their trades. And for those businesses to utilize the features offered by the XRPL, they need to buy, hold, and spend at least a small amount of XRP to cover transaction costs and account reserve requirements. So as long as Ripple, XRP's issuer, keeps adding new features and attracting new users for the XRPL over time, which it's highly incentivized to do, it'll be driving some incremental demand for the coin, which could cause its price to go up over time.
The catch is that XRP has been a very bumpy ride for holders.
The coin's price is $1.36, down 63% from its all-time high set in mid-2025. Its maximum historical drawdown is approximately 96% set during a long and painful decline from early 2018 to early 2020, and its typical price volatility is, during its best stretches, twice that of the S&P 500.
Retirement portfolios absorb dips all the time, but a near-total wipeout will test even the most patient and self-assured investor. So this risk profile is more or less incompatible with being a core holding for any long-term retirement savings strategy.
XRP shouldn't be the workhorse of a retirement savings portfolio, but it could still play a niche role.
If your portfolio is already diversified with stocks, bonds, some commodity exposure, and perhaps some Bitcoin as its primary crypto exposure, a small XRP allocation worth no more than 4% of the portfolio's total value could add some asymmetric upside without threatening its overall structure. The odds of your XRP position paying off will be a lot higher if you have at least four or five years to hold it.
For anyone who's closer to drawing down their savings, XRP's volatility makes it a poor fit regardless of its potential. It has a bright future, but no one expects a smooth ride.
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Alex Carchidi has positions in Bitcoin. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Bitcoin and XRP. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.