XRP rainbow chart

XRP Rainbow Chart Guide

This guide explains how to use the XRP rainbow chart as historical market context for XRP, using the same generated chart data and logarithmic rainbow bands published on cryptorainbowcharts.com.

Updated2026-06-09
TopicXRP
AdviceNone

What the XRP rainbow chart shows

The XRP rainbow chart compares XRP's daily USD price history with a fitted logarithmic trend and a set of rainbow valuation bands. The goal is to show whether XRP is trading near historically lower, neutral, or hotter zones relative to its own price history.

Using chart data through 2026-04-26, XRP is currently in the Fair Value band at about $1.43. That reading is a model snapshot, not a prediction or recommendation.

Why XRP needs its own rainbow chart

XRP has its own market structure, liquidity profile, token history, and investor base, so a XRP rainbow chart should be read against XRP's own historical data rather than copied from Bitcoin or Ethereum.

XRP has a distinct legal, liquidity, and market-history profile compared with many smart-contract networks. The XRP rainbow chart is most useful when read as a history-based visual model rather than a direct comparison with unrelated assets.

How to read the bands

Lower bands such as Fire Sale, Accumulate, and Still Cheap generally indicate that XRP is below the fitted long-term trend. Middle bands such as Fair Value and Warm suggest more neutral historical positioning, while upper bands such as FOMO, Overheated, and Bubble indicate prices stretched above the fitted trend.

The band names are descriptive labels. They are not trading signals, price targets, cycle timers, or claims that XRP must revert to a specific level.

What to compare next

A useful way to interpret the XRP rainbow chart is to compare it with other assets in the same broad market conversation. Nearby pages include Bitcoin rainbow chart, Ethereum rainbow chart, USDC rainbow chart, Solana rainbow chart.

Cross-asset comparison can show whether XRP is unusually cold or hot relative to other crypto assets, but each chart still depends on the asset's own historical data and model fit.

Common mistakes

The biggest mistake is treating the XRP rainbow chart as a forecast. A rainbow chart can make historical regimes easier to see, but it cannot know future liquidity, regulation, network usage, token unlocks, exchange flows, or macro conditions.

Another mistake is ignoring data range. This XRP page uses 4,106 daily observations from 2015-01-29 through 2026-04-26; assets with shorter histories can produce more fragile model fits.

Bottom line

The XRP rainbow chart is best used as a visual research tool for understanding where XRP sits relative to its own historical logarithmic trend.

Use it alongside the live chart, rankings page, methodology notes, and independent research. Nothing on cryptorainbowcharts.com is financial advice.

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