Over 23 billion XRP is currently considered safe from quantum threats, according to a new analysis of the XRP Ledger. However, 76.82 billion XRP across 5.6 million accounts are exposed, raising concerns about dormant wallets and their security.
Key points
23.16 billion XRP is safe from quantum threats
76.82 billion XRP is exposed across 5.6 million accounts
Ripple plans to achieve quantum resistance by 2028
Ripple’s escrow accounts are among the wallets that may not be as protected as they appear. A new breakdown of every account on the XRP Ledger found that multi-signature wallets — including those tied to Ripple — hold 36.60 billion XRP, or over 36% of the total supply, but are not automatically shielded from future quantum threats without proper key management.
What The Numbers Show
The analysis was conducted by XRPL validator Vet, who reviewed all 7,810,364 accounts on the XRP Ledger. Based on that review, 23.16 billion XRP currently sits in wallets considered safe from quantum attack.
That works out to 27% of all accounts — roughly 2.13 million wallets. Two factors account for their safety: either the wallets have never signed a transaction, meaning the public key has never been exposed, or the account holders rotated their keys and disabled master keys as an extra security step. The first group covers over 24% of accounts. The second, more deliberate group accounts for 2.65%.
The logic is straightforward. When a wallet signs a transaction, its public key becomes visible on the ledger. A sufficiently advanced quantum computer could theoretically use that public key to work backward and derive the private key. Wallets that have never signed anything don’t have that exposure.
Did a Full History deep dive on all 7.8M XRP Accounts for Quantum Threat exposure targeting dormant accounts.
Genesis XRP accounts, the Satoshi Era equivalent, is 0.02% of all XRP supply that is dormant and exposed.
On the other side of the ledger, 76.82 billion XRP spread across 5.6 million accounts is considered exposed. But Vet noted that 96% of that amount belongs to users who are still active — people who, when the time comes, can move their funds to safer addresses.
The harder problem is dormant accounts. Wallets that have been inactive for five or more years hold 2.94% of the total XRP supply, which amounts to 3.83% of all exposed XRP. At the far end, accounts with no activity since before 2014 represent just 0.02% of total supply.
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Reports indicate that group includes only 14,710 accounts, compared to 1.33 million in the five-year inactive category. For context, Vet pointed to Bitcoin, where holdings tied to make up roughly 5% of total supply — much of which may never be moved.
Nobody knows why dormant wallets were abandoned. Lost keys, forgotten accounts, and personal circumstances all come into play. That uncertainty makes them the most difficult part of the quantum exposure problem.
Q&A
How many XRP wallets are considered safe from quantum attacks?
Approximately 23.16 billion XRP is held in wallets deemed safe from quantum attacks, which accounts for about 27% of all accounts.
What percentage of XRP accounts are exposed to quantum threats?
76.82 billion XRP is spread across 5.6 million accounts considered exposed to quantum threats.
What is the timeline for Ripple's quantum resistance plan?
Ripple aims to make the XRP Ledger fully quantum-resistant by 2028, with early testing of new systems already underway.
What happens to dormant XRP accounts in terms of quantum safety?
Dormant accounts, particularly those inactive for five or more years, pose a significant risk, holding 2.94% of the total XRP supply and complicating the quantum exposure issue.
The XRP Ledger currently uses Ed25519 and secp256k1 cryptographic standards. Both remain secure today, but could become vulnerable as quantum computing advances.
Ripple has laid out a four-phase roadmap aimed at making the network fully quantum-resistant by 2028. Early testing of new systems is already underway, with updates to the main network planned for later phases.
The long-term fix for exposed wallets is expected to involve quantum-resistant encryption that lets users migrate funds to better-protected addresses.
That works for people who still have access. For those who don’t — whether due to lost credentials or other circumstances — the exposure may be permanent.
*Featured image from ForkLog, chart from TradingView*