In recent months, the tokenomics of XRP have diverged significantly from those of other prominent cryptocurrencies such as Ethereum and Shiba Inu. While SHIB actively engages in supply reduction via regular burns and Ethereum implemented a fee-burning mechanism through the EIP-1559 protocol, XRP’s approach to burning is distinctly tied to transaction fees on the Ripple network. Specifically, XRP is only destroyed when users execute transactions; the fee, usually costing mere cents, is permanently removed from circulation.
Data from September 21 shows a stark reduction in the amount of XRP burned as transaction fees. On that day, only 163 XRP were destroyed, marking a significant decline from the spikes in network activity observed in July and early August. This decline raises critical questions about the long-term dynamics of XRP’s supply and the broader utilization of the XRP Ledger.
Unlike Ethereum and SHIB, XRP lacks a protocol-level or community-driven mechanism to facilitate an increase in burn rates. As a result, the current rate of nearly zero burns diminishes any meaningful impact on supply reduction. This situation calls into question one of the bullish narratives traditionally associated with XRP: the idea of scarcity achieved through destructive mechanisms. With nearly 60 billion tokens in circulation and no effective removal strategies, the concept of scarcity is under significant strain.
Compounding these challenges, technical analysis reveals that XRP is operating within a downward channel. Key support levels have been established at $2.99 and $2.83, and failure to maintain these prices could lead to further decline. The argument for scarcity-driven growth appears increasingly feeble without the support of burning mechanisms that would strengthen long-term fundamentals.
This decrease in transaction-related burns underscores the urgent need for the Ripple ecosystem to enhance its on-chain utility. Absent any substantial alterations in supply dynamics, future price growth may rely more on institutional adoption or speculative trading rather than robust tokenomics. Investors find themselves grappling with pressing questions about the asset’s long-term viability, particularly as the narrative around XRP’s burn mechanics fades into the background.

