XRP Ledger Congestion Could Burn 1 Billion Coins A Year, Developer Claims
Software Engineer and founder of various AI start ups Vincent Van Code (@vincent_vancode) argues on X that most XRP burn projections are understated because they assume todayβs low transaction fees persist even under heavy network usage. In his framing, sustained congestion on the XRP Ledger (XRPL) could push fees higher via the protocolβs load-scaling mechanics, potentially destroying on the order of one billion XRP annually.
XRPL Load Factor Could Turn Fees Into A Major XRP Burn
In a thread titled βThe βSupply Meltdownβ Simulation,β Vincent Van Code claimed βeveryone is calculating the XRP burn wrong,β starting with the premise that the commonly cited base fee of 0.00001 XRP only reflects a quiet network. βBut what happens if the world actually starts using the XRPL at its 3,400 TPS limit?β he wrote, positioning load-driven fee escalation as the pivotal variable rather than raw throughput alone.
Van Codeβs simulation walks through multiple fee regimes at the same headline activity rate, emphasizing that burn changes dramatically when the ledger is full and the βLoad Factorβ increases fees to deter spam. βAs the ledger fills up, the Load Factor kicks in to stop spam,β he wrote. βFees donβt just stay low; they scale exponentially.β
He anchored the thread with four scenarios and daily burn estimates, starting with what he called a βstandard dayβ of 1.2 million transactions and roughly 450 XRP burned per day. From there, he modeled βglobal adoptionβ at the stated 3,400 TPS ceiling, translating to about 293 million transactions per day at base fee and an estimated 2,937 XRP burned daily.
The more aggressive claims come when he holds transaction volume constant at that 293 million-per-day level but lifts the effective fee via congestion. In his βcongestion hikeβ case, he assumes the load-scaled fee rises to 0.001 XRP, implying about 293,760 XRP burned per day. In a βfull gridlockβ case at 0.01 XRP per transaction, he estimates 2,937,600 XRP burned daily.
The thesis leans on a structural feature of XRPL fees: they are not paid out to validators or any sponsoring entity, but removed from circulation. Van Code underscored that distinction directly. βThe fees arenβt paid to miners. They arenβt paid to Ripple. They are destroyed forever.β
The βSupply Meltdownβ Simulation
Headline: Everyone is calculating the $XRP burn wrong.
The βbase feeβ (0.00001 XRP) only exists when the network is quiet. But what happens if the world actually starts using the XRPL at its 3,400 TPS limit? The Congestion Math: As theβ¦
β Vincent Van Code (@vincent_vancode) January 24, 2026
From that, he draws his headline conclusion: βUnder extreme global utility, we arenβt burning a few hundred tokens. We could be wiping 1 BILLION $XRP out of existence every year,β framing network demandβand the congestion it createsβas βthe ultimate deflationary engine.β
At press time, XRP traded at $1.88.

Headline: Everyone is calculating the
The βbase feeβ (0.00001 XRP) only exists when the network is quiet. But what happens if the world actually starts using the XRPL at its 3,400 TPS limit?
The Congestion Math:
As theβ¦