Live XRP-TRY rate from Phemex spot, with USD-TRY foreign-exchange from a daily-refreshed reference rate. Turkey has one of the highest per-capita crypto adoption rates in the world, driven primarily by lira inflation as a hedge motive — at points in 2022-23, Turkey accounted for 4-5% of global crypto trading volume despite housing under 1% of the world's population.
Pre-calculated at the live rate of 1 XRP = ₺62,66 TRY.
XRP-TRY trades on BTCTurk, Paribu, Bitlo, and Binance TR. Volume reflects Turkey's broader high-per-capita crypto demand. Like BTC-TRY and ETH-TRY, persistent lira weakness against the dollar means XRP-TRY structurally trends upward over time as a function of the FX trend itself, before any XRP-USD price change. Turkish retail interest in XRP has been notable owing to the asset's cross-border-payment relevance for Turkey-Europe corridors.
XRP is originally designed for cross-border payment settlement, with a transaction speed of 3-5 seconds and fees measured in fractions of a cent. XRP-fiat liquidity is concentrated on a handful of venues but those venues have tight spreads. The price has historically tracked broader crypto sentiment with periods of strong divergence around regulatory news — particularly U.S. SEC litigation, which was largely resolved in XRP's favour in 2023.
The Turkish lira has one of the more dramatic modern monetary histories. The original lira was redenominated in 2005 with a 1,000,000:1 ratio to combat the inflation of the 1990s — the highest-denomination banknote at that point was 20,000,000 (twenty million) lira. The 'new' lira (subsequently just renamed lira in 2009) maintained relative stability for the rest of the 2000s before sharp depreciation accelerated from 2018 onward. The Türkiye Cumhuriyet Merkez Bankası (Central Bank of Turkey) has run an unconventional monetary policy under President Erdoğan's heterodox preference for low rates despite high inflation, with the lira moving from roughly 7 per dollar in 2020 to over 30 per dollar by 2024.
Used in: Turkey, plus the self-declared Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (recognised only by Turkey), where the lira is the official currency. The lira is also widely accepted in Turkish-speaking communities of neighbouring states.
Turkey has one of the highest per-capita crypto adoption rates in the world, driven primarily by lira inflation as a hedge motive — at points in 2022-23, Turkey accounted for 4-5% of global crypto trading volume despite housing under 1% of the world's population. TRY-pair liquidity is concentrated on domestic exchanges — BTCTurk and Paribu — plus major global venues with direct TRY rails.
Major TRY-accessible exchanges include BTCTurk (founded 2013, Istanbul, Turkey's largest by volume), Paribu, Bitlo, and Binance TR (still operates despite a 2023 Binance-Turkey announcement to wind down). Crypto is currently legal to hold and trade in Turkey but cannot be used as a means of payment for goods and services — a 2021 central bank ruling that remains in force. Tax treatment: as of late 2024, capital gains on crypto are not subject to a specific tax regime, and most retail activity goes unreported — though this is widely expected to change as Turkey aligns with broader G20 reporting standards. The TRY's persistent weakness against the dollar means BTC-TRY tends to track BTC-USD plus a depreciation premium that compounds over time, structurally favouring crypto holders with a long horizon.
Turkey's crypto culture is unusually utility-driven and concentrated. Around 25-30% of adults hold some crypto — among the highest per-capita rates anywhere — driven primarily by the structural use case of escaping lira depreciation. Stablecoins (especially USDT) dominate the volume share for everyday savings, with Bitcoin and Ethereum used for longer-horizon hedging. The 2021 central-bank ban on crypto-as-payment didn't reduce holding or trading volumes; it just clarified that crypto is treated as an investable asset rather than an alternative currency. Bitcoin-as-monetary-protest sentiment exists but is muted compared to the practical 'I need to escape the lira' framing that drives most retail. Turkish exchanges operate at scale despite occasional regulatory pressure: BTCTurk and Paribu collectively handle hundreds of millions of dollars in daily volume. The absence (so far) of a specific crypto tax regime has reduced friction relative to comparably-sized markets, though this is widely expected to change. Bali-style digital-nomad culture has also taken root in Antalya and Istanbul, drawing internationally-mobile crypto holders who use TRY as a temporary on-ramp for living costs.
1 XRP is worth ₺62,66 TRY at the current spot rate. The rate updates every minute against the Phemex price feed and the USD-TRY foreign-exchange rate refreshes hourly from a public reference source. Prices on individual exchanges differ by a few basis points owing to spread and venue-specific liquidity, but the spot rate above is a reliable reference point.
Yes, holding and trading XRP are legal in Turkey. Turkey's crypto culture is unusually utility-driven and concentrated. See the regional context block above for the full picture on tax treatment, exchange access, and any restrictions on using XRP as a means of payment.
The exchange landscape for XRP-TRY in Turkey is summarised in detail in the section above. Major TRY-accessible exchanges include BTCTurk (founded 2013, Istanbul, Turkey's largest by volume), Paribu, Bitlo, and Binance TR (still operates despite a 2023 Binance-Turkey announcement to wind down). Use the converter widget above to size your purchase against the current rate before opening the exchange.