Key Highlights
- Ripple has published a four-phase roadmap to make the XRP Ledger quantum-resistant by 2028, with cryptographic testing underway in partnership with Project Eleven.
- The roadmap includes a “Quantum-Day” contingency plan to force migration to post-quantum accounts if current cryptography is compromised unexpectedly.
- No amendment has been enacted on mainnet, and the 2028 date remains a forward-looking target, not a present-day network state.
Three weeks after Google Quantum AI dropped a whitepaper showing that the cryptographic infrastructure securing most blockchains could be broken with roughly 20 times fewer quantum resources than previously estimated, Ripple has responded with a sequenced, four-phase engineering roadmap to make the XRP Ledger post-quantum ready by 2028.
The roadmap, authored by Ayo Akinyele, Head of Engineering at RippleX, lays out how Ripple intends to migrate a live financial network — one that processes 3–5 second settlement finality — to quantum-resistant cryptography without disrupting the roughly $80 billion in value the XRPL ecosystem secures.
The timing is not accidental. Google’s March 31 paper — co-authored by researchers from Google Quantum AI, UC Berkeley, Stanford, and the Ethereum Foundation — showed that the elliptic curve cryptography securing most blockchains could be broken with roughly 20 times fewer quantum resources than previously estimated.
The Four Phases: From Contingency to Full Transition
Ripple’s roadmap is structured around two parallel objectives — preserving XRPL’s operational strengths during the transition, and preparing for the possibility that Q-Day arrives earlier than expected. The plan unfolds across four phases.
The first establishes a contingency protocol for a sudden cryptographic break — a scenario Ripple refers to as “Quantum-Day.” In that event, XRPL would stop accepting classical signatures and require accounts to migrate to post-quantum secure keys. Ripple says it is exploring the use of zero-knowledge proofs to let users prove key ownership without exposing vulnerable cryptographic material during the transition.
The second phase, already underway, focuses on benchmarking NIST-recommended quantum-resistant signature schemes — including ML-DSA — against XRPL’s transaction model to measure impacts on verification speed, throughput, and storage. Ripple is collaborating with Project Eleven, a post-quantum security startup that raised $20 million in a Series A round in January, to build a proof-of-concept hybrid signing implementation, including validator-level testing, Devnet benchmarking, and a custody wallet prototype.
Phase three, planned for the second half of 2026, will deploy candidate post-quantum signatures alongside existing elliptic curve signatures on Devnet for developer testing. The final phase targets a formal XRPL amendment proposal for native post-quantum cryptography at production scale, requiring validator consensus to activate on mainnet.
XRPL’s Native Key Rotation: Advantage or Overstated?
Ripple highlights XRPL’s built-in key rotation as a structural advantage for quantum migration. The feature lets account holders swap their cryptographic keys without changing their underlying account address — meaning users would not need to create new accounts or transfer assets during a post-quantum upgrade.
This contrasts with Ethereum, where no protocol-native key rotation exists. Any quantum migration on Ethereum would require users to manually move assets to entirely new accounts, a process complicated by smart contract dependencies and DeFi integrations.
However, it is worth noting that key rotation alone is not a post-quantum solution — Ripple itself acknowledges this in the blog post. The feature provides a migration path, but the actual quantum-resistant cryptography still needs to be built, tested, and deployed. Other networks are pursuing different approaches: Ethereum’s post-quantum team is targeting 2029 through a multi-fork upgrade roadmap, while Bitcoin developers are evaluating BIP-360 and StarkWare’s hash-based “Quantum Safe Bitcoin” prototype. Projects like QRL and Abelian were designed with quantum resistance from the outset.
No Mainnet Changes Yet
The distinction between a roadmap and a shipped upgrade matters. No XRPL amendment has been enacted, no rippled release includes post-quantum signatures, and no validator migration has taken place. The 2028 target is contingent on successful Devnet testing, ecosystem coordination, and validator voting — each of which introduces its own timeline risks.
Ripple’s applied cryptography team — Dr. Murat Cenk, Dr. Tamas Visegrady, Dr. Oleg Burundukov, and Dr. Aanchal Malhotra — is leading the technical work, with engineer Denis Angell already prototyping ML-DSA on XRPL’s AlphaNet. The Devnet testing phase starting later this year will be the first externally verifiable milestone.
The broader quantum threat remains credible but not imminent. Google’s research estimates that fewer than 500,000 physical qubits could crack ECDSA-256, though no such machine exists today. Industry timelines for when cryptographically relevant quantum computers might arrive range from 2029 to 2035, depending on hardware progress. The more immediate concern, flagged by both Google and Ripple, is the “harvest now, decrypt later” risk — where attackers collect on-chain cryptographic data today and wait for future quantum capability to exploit it.
XRP was trading at approximately $1.43 at the time of publication, up over 4.6% in the past week as per data from CoinMarketCap.
Also Read: What is ‘Q-Day’? The Quantum Deadline for the Crypto Industry to Upgrade
