Binance's new campaign with an $800,000 prize pool in $XRP tokens has attracted increased attention from holders of the Ripple USD ($RLUSD) stablecoin. However, strict regulatory filters and technical requirements significantly narrow the pool of potential participants.

The first barrier is geographic eligibility. Binance restricted the list of participants, citing the European MiCA regulation covering unauthorized stablecoins and its internal compliance requirements.

Not only is full identity verification (KYC) required to participate, but the exchange has completely excluded residents of Canada, Japan, Iran, North Korea, and more.

Most of Europe is also restricted, and residents of Germany, France, Austria, Belgium, Cyprus, and other countries in the European Economic Area (EEA) will not be able to participate in the $XRP distribution.

For users in eligible countries, the exchange has introduced a two-stage qualification system:

  • Balance threshold: holding at least 0.01 $RLUSD in Earn, Margin, or Futures accounts.
  • Trading activity: an average daily trading volume of at least $500 in the Margin or Futures section. Trades may involve any assets, but $RLUSD must be used as collateral.

How Binance plans to filter balances for $XRP airdrop

The technical structure of the distributions is designed to prevent attempts to artificially inflate balances or trading volumes. The system takes random hourly account snapshots, but the lowest recorded balance is used to calculate the daily reward.

If the balance briefly falls to zero during the day, that day will not generate any rewards.

User A holds 10,000 $RLUSD as collateral in Margin throughout week 1 and trades a total of $7,000 in qualifying trading volume in Margin throughout week 1. The effective base $APR is 20%. User A's rewards to be received at the end of week 1 will be as follows:
  • $7,000 / 7 = $1,000 > $500, qualifying for rewards
  • (10,000 * 20% * 7) / 365 = 38.35 USD worth of $XRP

Special attention is given to borrowed capital. If a user borrows third-party stablecoins such as USDT, USDC, U, USD1, or FDUSD through a margin account and converts them into $RLUSD, a 60% haircut is applied to that amount. Direct loans denominated in $RLUSD are completely excluded from the calculation.

Ultimately, the campaign offers a classic trade-off — a variable weekly $APR paid in $XRP is offset by the need to keep liquidity on a centralized platform instead of in non-custodial wallets and to actively participate in trading.

Binance once again appears to confirm a simple truth: in the world of large airdrops, there are no truly free tokens, and every cent of a bonus must be paid for either with liquidity or trading activity.