A filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) shows that Made In USA Inc. has integrated the XRP Ledger (XRPL) into its core technology infrastructure, enabling the ledger to support American supply chain verification and product certification.
The company, headquartered in Franklin, North Carolina, has provided Made in USA certification services for more than 28 years. It disclosed the integration in a Form 8‑K filed with the SEC on June 26, 2026.
Acquisition Adds XRPL Technology to the Business
The Form 8‑K was filed under Item 2.01, covering the completion of an acquisition. According to the filing, Made In USA Inc. (USDW) acquired intellectual property and technology assets from its affiliate, Made in USA One LLC, a Wyoming limited liability company, in an all‑stock deal worth $25 million.
To complete the acquisition, the company issued 5 million restricted shares of common stock as the sole form of payment, with no cash involved.
The acquired assets now form the foundation of a technology‑driven platform for Made in USA verification, certification, and supply chain transparency. The filing specifically notes that the platform uses blockchain infrastructure built on both public and private XRP Ledger networks, together with Hyperledger.

The platform also includes AI‑powered verification tools, Trusted Platform Module (TPM) security for hardware attestation, enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems linked to the Internet of Things (IoT), and a modular DataWallet technology stack.
A Hybrid Blockchain Model
The solution employs a hybrid blockchain model that separates confidential business information from publicly verifiable records. Private XRPL networks store sensitive data, while the public XRP Ledger records permanent proof of product authenticity, giving regulators, partners, and consumers an independently verifiable transparency layer.
This approach lets businesses protect private information while providing a transparent, third‑party‑accessible record for verification.
The XRP Ledger offers transaction speeds of three to five seconds, transaction costs of fractions of a cent, and a throughput of up to 1,500 transactions per second. It also includes built‑in compliance tools such as authorized trust lines, asset freezing, and credential‑based access controls, reducing the need for complex smart‑contract implementations.
XRPL Enterprise Adoption Continues to Grow
The filing follows a wave of XRPL adoption across sectors. In May 2025, the Dubai Land Department selected the XRPL for its real‑estate tokenization initiative via the Prypco Mint platform. In the supply‑chain finance space, Hong Kong‑listed fintech Linklogis partnered with the XRPL to tokenize invoices and trade receivables, processing over $2.8 billion in cross‑border assets within a year. Meanwhile, Brazilian securitization firm VERT launched a $130 million Agribusiness Receivables Certificate on the XRP Ledger.
The USDW filing introduces a novel use case focused on physical‑goods authentication within the American manufacturing sector, distinguishing it from recent XRPL projects that emphasize financial assets or real‑estate tokenization.
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