South Korea’s KBank signed a strategic partnership with Ripple on April 27 to test blockchain-based cross-border remittances, marking Ripple’s second Korean institutional deal this month and its first with a major Korean digital bank.
Summary
- KBank and Ripple are conducting a second-phase proof of concept using Ripple’s Palisade wallet for on-chain remittances to the UAE and Thailand.
- KBank serves 15 million users as the exclusive banking partner of Upbit, South Korea’s largest crypto exchange.
- The deal follows Ripple’s April 15 Kyobo Life partnership and arrives as South Korea finalizes its Digital Asset Basic Act.
Ripple KBank partnership was confirmed on April 27 when KBank CEO Choi Woo-hyung and Ripple Asia-Pacific Managing Director Fiona Murray signed an agreement at KBank’s headquarters in Seoul. The Korea Herald reported that the deal focuses on testing whether blockchain-based overseas remittances can improve speed, cost efficiency, and transparency compared to traditional correspondent banking rails.
Ripple KBank Test Targets UAE and Thailand Remittance Corridors
The partnership is structured as a multi-phase proof-of-concept rather than a live commercial product. The first phase tested a wallet-based remittance model through a separate app interface. The second phase, now underway, digitally connects KBank’s customer accounts and internal systems to test on-chain transfer stability across corridors to the UAE and Thailand, using Ripple’s Palisade SaaS-based digital wallet. As crypto.news reported, the partnership does not yet use XRP as a bridge asset, with testing currently using stablecoin-based settlement to avoid the volatility constraints that compliance-heavy bank pilots require. Murray said that KBank “has helped set the standard for digital banking in Korea and continues to drive innovation,” adding that Ripple is pleased to bring its global blockchain network to KBank’s remittance infrastructure.
KBank’s Position Makes This Deal Strategically Significant
KBank is not a typical bank partner for Ripple. It is South Korea’s first internet-only lender and the exclusive banking partner of Upbit, the country’s largest crypto exchange by trading volume. Korean regulations require all crypto exchange users to link a verified bank account, with each major exchange paired exclusively with one bank, a monopoly structure that drove KBank’s user base from approximately 2 million in 2020 to 15 million by the end of 2025. As crypto.news documented, this is the second Ripple institutional deal in Korea this month, following the April 15 Kyobo Life Insurance partnership for tokenized government bond settlement. That deal used Ripple Custody and also involved Fiona Murray on Ripple’s side, suggesting that the same Asia-Pacific leadership team is systematically building Korea into one of Ripple’s primary institutional expansion markets.
What the Deal Signals for Ripple’s Korea Strategy
South Korea is finalizing its Digital Asset Basic Act, a comprehensive digital asset regulatory framework that is expected to formally classify stablecoins as payment instruments and impose new requirements on cross-border digital asset activity. As crypto.news tracked, major Korean financial institutions have been accelerating blockchain infrastructure deals ahead of the law taking effect, with Ripple positioning its Palisade wallet, Ripple Custody platform, and RLUSD stablecoin as the settlement layer for Korean institutions building that infrastructure now. If the KBank proof-of-concept succeeds and regulators approve, the partnership could expand into live remittance services, potentially generating real XRP demand if KBank activates Ripple’s On-Demand Liquidity service using XRP as a bridge between Korean won and foreign currencies.
KBank said it plans to continue technical verification of remittance use cases for stablecoins as South Korea’s legal framework for digital assets develops, and has not confirmed a commercial launch timeline.

















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