- XRP continues bouncing between $2.35 and $2.99 with no clear breakout.
- Rejections near $3.00 are stacking up, but buyers aren’t letting go.
- Short-term support near $2.20 is becoming more critical as compression builds.
No Panic—But No Celebration Either
XRP’s price action has been a little frustrating, honestly. It’s not crashing, not rallying—just wobbling between support and resistance like it’s waiting for a reason to move. The last push toward $3.00 was quickly denied, and now we’re floating back near $2.38 with no strong conviction in either direction.
But the important thing here is XRP hasn’t rolled over. The bears had plenty of chances, especially after that last rejection near $2.99, and they still haven’t forced a breakdown. So, it’s dull—but it’s not dead. That counts for something.
Compression Points Are Lining Up
Here’s where it starts to get interesting: this kind of sideways chop usually doesn’t last forever. We’ve now had multiple lower highs since the $3.40 top, but also multiple higher lows off that $1.90 area. The chart is squeezing. Like, noticeably.
If XRP dips under $2.20 again and can’t recover quickly, that might trigger some panic. But as long as it floats above that line, the setup stays alive. A solid daily close above $2.99 would likely send this thing flying, at least back into the mid-$3s.
And you can kinda feel that pressure building, right? Each time XRP bounces, it doesn’t lose as much ground. The problem is just—it can’t seem to finish the job. Yet.

Buyers Still Showing Up—Quietly
Look, there’s no euphoric hype right now. That’s actually a good thing. Quiet accumulation phases like this often precede explosive breakouts… or deep plunges, depending on who gives up first. But given XRP’s refusal to make new lows even after that last failed breakout, it’s fair to say the buyers are still hanging around.
What makes this zone so tricky is how evenly matched both sides are. Sellers defend the highs. Buyers scoop the lows. The moment one of them gets tired or overconfident, that’s when things could break loose—and probably fast.
But let’s be real: if you’re watching this chart every day, you already know something’s coming. You just don’t know which way it’ll go yet. No shame in waiting it out.
Where XRP Comes From
XRP was created by Ripple Labs to serve as a bridge asset in cross-border payments. It launched in 2012 with a focus on speed, low fees, and financial institution adoption. Unlike most cryptos, XRP doesn’t use mining and instead relies on a consensus protocol through selected validators.