- XRP is holding key support near $2.00 after a failed push toward $2.20
- ETF inflows are absorbing supply, but Ripple’s monthly sales remain a headwind
- A break above $2.20 or below $2.00 will likely decide the next short-term move
Ripple’s XRP is sitting near $2.05 at the moment, holding just above a level that’s quietly done a lot of work this week. In the last update, the focus was on $2.00 as the line that keeps the short-term structure from slipping. That level held, and price respected it almost perfectly.
XRP stayed above $2.00, pushed higher mid-week, and briefly tagged the $2.20 area before rolling back again. The breakout didn’t stick, but the reaction mattered. Buyers showed up below $2.00, confirming demand even as upside momentum faded.
So now the obvious question hangs in the air, where does XRP go from here?
What’s Actually Moving the XRP Price
Flows continue to do most of the heavy lifting. U.S. spot XRP ETFs now hold roughly $1.56 billion in assets, with average daily inflows around $10.6 million. Franklin Templeton’s XRPZ ETF alone pulled in close to $28.6 million in a single January week. Those numbers matter because they actively absorb supply rather than just reshuffle it.
On the other side of the ledger, Ripple is still selling about $200 million worth of XRP each month to fund operations. That steady issuance creates a constant supply overhang. For XRP to trend higher in a sustained way, ETF inflows need to keep outrunning those sales. If inflows slow or pause, downside tests become much more likely.
On-chain data adds a bit more color. Large holders accumulated more than 50 million XRP last week while price chopped sideways near $2.00. Exchange data showed daily net outflows of roughly $13.1 million, which helps ease immediate sell pressure. Derivatives positioning, however, is crowded. On Binance, the long-to-short ratio is hovering near 3.0. That kind of imbalance can support upside, but it also leaves the market vulnerable to sharp pullbacks if price slips.

XRP Chart Shows a Tight Range, Not a Trend
The chart itself tells a fairly balanced story. XRP remains range-bound, with $2.00 acting as firm support. Buyers have stepped in repeatedly around that level, keeping price from breaking lower despite several tests.
Overhead, $2.20 is the first real resistance to watch. That zone rejected price earlier in the week and hasn’t been reclaimed since. Above it, the $2.30 area lines up with prior supply and would likely require a strong momentum push to clear.
Momentum indicators reflect this indecision. RSI is sitting in the mid-30s to low-40s, not oversold, but far from strong. MACD is flat and hugging the zero line, a classic sign of consolidation. Net longs still outweigh shorts, which helps keep the range intact, but it also raises volatility risk if support finally gives way.
Right now, sellers are active above $2.20. Buyers are active near $2.00. Neither side has control yet.
Short-Term Outlook for XRP
As long as $2.00 holds on a closing basis, the near-term bias stays neutral to slightly bullish. In that case, XRP could make another run toward the $2.15 to $2.25 zone. A clean break and hold above $2.20 would open the path toward $2.30, but only if ETF inflows remain steady and broader market conditions don’t sour.
If $2.00 breaks, the tone changes quickly. The next meaningful support sits near $1.80, a level that could attract buyers again, but it would reset short-term sentiment in the process.
For now, the most likely outcome is more range trading between $2.00 and $2.20. Where XRP heads next depends on which side blinks first, and whether demand can continue to keep pace with supply.











