For the first time in almost a year, more wallets are pulling XRP off Binance than putting it on. It’s a small shift on its face, but on the largest XRP trading venue, a flip like this is worth paying attention to, not because it makes XRP bullish, but because the behavior underneath the price has changed.
- More wallets are now withdrawing XRP from Binance than depositing, a first since July 2025.
- The net figure swung from +26,200 to -6,210 wallets in 23 days.
- XRP trades at $1.11, up 2.5%, bouncing off the $1.00-1.05 support band.
Binance Net Wallet Flows Turn Negative
The metric here tracks the difference between wallets depositing XRP to Binance and wallets withdrawing it, measured over a rolling seven-day window. For most of the past year, deposits dominated. That’s no longer the case.
- On June 7, Binance recorded roughly +26,200 net depositing wallets, deposits heavily outweighing withdrawals.
- By June 30, that figure had fallen to -6,210, meaning withdrawing wallets outnumbered depositing ones.
- That’s a swing of 32,410 wallets in just 23 days.
The bigger detail is the context. This is the first negative reading since July 2025, and the previous low was only -1,350. Today’s figure is about 4.6 times more negative than that, so this isn’t a marginal dip below the line, it’s the strongest withdrawal bias Binance has seen on XRP in nearly a year.

Exchange flows carry a rough behavioral signal. Deposits generally mean coins are being positioned to trade or sell, while withdrawals often mean users are moving assets into private wallets, custodial services, or DeFi, where they tend to sit rather than get traded right away.
So a decline in depositing wallets suggests less fresh supply is arriving on Binance, which, if the trend holds, could ease some immediate selling pressure. And because Binance is the largest XRP trading venue, a decisive flip here reads as more meaningful than the same move on a smaller exchange would.
This is where it pays to be careful, because the metric has a real limitation. It measures wallets, not amounts.
One whale depositing 100 million XRP counts exactly the same as one retail wallet depositing 100 XRP. By the same logic, thousands of small withdrawals don’t necessarily mean more XRP left the exchange than came in. So the data can’t prove accumulation, and it can’t confirm that Binance’s XRP balances are actually falling. All it shows, precisely, is that wallet behavior has tilted toward withdrawals. That’s a genuine signal, but it’s a narrow one, and it’s worth holding it to exactly what it says.
How the price is reacting
The price backdrop fits a market that’s bouncing without having turned. XRP trades at $1.11 on Coinbase on 3th of July, up 2.47% on the day, closing right at the session high, which tells you buyers held control into the close. The bounce comes off a local bottom in the $1.00-1.05 band printed in late June, after a steep drop from around $1.5 in early June.

Zoom out and the trend is still down. Since February, XRP has carved a sequence of lower highs, roughly $1.50 in February, $1.48 in May, $1.26 on the mid-June rebound, with June’s selloff the sharpest leg, falling from about $1.40 to the $1.00 zone in roughly three weeks. The current move is the second bounce attempt off that $1.00-1.05 support, which has now been tested several times and held.
The moving averages leave no doubt about the larger trend. Price sits below all three, and all three slope down:
| Moving Average | Level | Distance Above Price |
|---|---|---|
| 50-day | $1.2083 | ~8.5% |
| 100-day | $1.2981 | ~16.5% |
| 200-day | $1.4863 | ~33% |
The full bearish stack, price below the 50, below the 100, below the 200, confirms the downtrend is intact. Overhead, first resistance sits around $1.15 (the mid-June consolidation zone), then the 50-day near $1.21, which also lines up with the June rebound territory.
Momentum is improving but not convincing. RSI reads 47.7 and rising, recovered from oversold near 30 in late June, and it’s back above its signal line at 35.97, consistent with a short-term bounce, but it’s sitting in neutral territory, not the kind of strength that usually accompanies a real trend reversal. Volume is the main caveat: today’s bounce is happening on modest turnover, while the largest recent volume spike was the green bar near the mid-June lows, possible absorption, but the follow-through failed. A recovery on weak volume is exactly what makes it hard to call this a durable turn.
XRP didn’t suddenly become short-term bullish. It’s that market behavior has shifted. For weeks, Binance was taking in XRP from more wallets than it was losing; that pattern has now reversed completely, reaching its strongest withdrawal bias in almost a year, even as price stages a modest bounce inside a still-intact downtrend.
Neither signal, on its own, confirms a turn. The wallet data would need backing from falling exchange reserves or rising long-term-holder balances to become real evidence that XRP holders are moving coins off exchanges to hold them. The price would need to reclaim the 50-day near $1.21 to suggest anything more than a relief bounce. Until those confirmations show up, this is what it is: a genuine change in behavior worth watching, sitting inside the same risk-off, lower-high pattern gripping the broader altcoin market, not proof that the tide has turned.






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