If you spend enough time reading discussions about Xahau, you’ll quickly notice that many people talk about the blockchain and its capabilities without fully understanding how it actually works.
The rise of AI-generated content, combined with the lack of deep technical research in many online discussions, has created an environment where misinformation spreads extremely fast. Over the last few months, I’ve repeatedly seen the same myths, misunderstandings, and inaccurate comparisons appear across social media.
So I decided to write this article to help clarify some of the most common misconceptions surrounding Xahau.
If you want to learn more about Xahau, I also recommend checking out the rest of the Learning Xahau series, where I share information about the ecosystem, automation concepts, development ideas, and practical use cases for builders interested in working with Xahau.
Today, however, we’re going to focus on breaking down some of the most common myths I’ve encountered online.
1. “Xahau Is an XRP Ledger Sidechain”
This is probably the most repeated myth.
XRP Ledger and Xahau share technological origins, but Xahau is not a native sidechain connected to the XRP Ledger.
Xahau is an independent Layer 1 blockchain built from a fork of XRPL code that evolved in a completely different direction.
That means:
- Xahau has its own validators
- Xahau has its own native asset: XAH
- Xahau has its own governance and technical evolution
- XRPL amendments do not automatically appear on Xahau
Both networks may occasionally adopt ideas from one another, but they evolve independently.
There are features available on XRP Ledger that do not exist on Xahau, and there are features on Xahau that do not exist on XRP Ledger.
Part of the sidechain confusion comes from the early history of the project.
In the beginning, Xahau was actually described as a sidechain, including in early versions of its whitepaper. At that time, there was a mechanism where XRP could be burned on the XRP Ledger and converted into XAH on the Xahau blockchain. However, that process was eventually closed. Once that bridge mechanism disappeared, the term “sidechain” no longer made technical sense.
Today, Xahau operates as an independent Layer 1 blockchain, even though it still shares part of its original codebase heritage with XRP Ledger.
2. “Projects Built on Xahau Don’t Actually Use XAH”
This is another claim I’ve seen online that honestly surprised me.
In many blockchain ecosystems, “adoption” often refers to companies using private versions of the technology, centralized services, or additional enterprise services offered by blockchain companies, while still presenting it publicly as if they were directly using the public blockchain itself. In some cases, the public chain or its native asset barely participates in the actual operation behind the scenes. Xahau works differently.
To interact with the network, you need XAH. Because XAH is the native asset required for network operation. XAH is a gas token.
XAH is used for:
- Account/Object reserves
- Transaction execution
- Hook interactions
There is no artificial separation between “the technology” and “the public blockchain.” Xahau only makes sense if the blockchain itself is actively used.
3. “Hooks Are Just Ethereum Smart Contracts”
No. While both systems enable automation, the philosophy behind them is completely different.
In Ethereum, smart contracts are typically full decentralized applications deployed directly on-chain. In Xahau, Hooks are lightweight pieces of logic attached directly to accounts that react to specific ledger events.
This creates a very different model:
- Compact logic
- Deterministic behavior
- Native account integration
- Direct financial automation
Hooks were never designed to replicate the EVM.
4. “The XAH You See on XRPL Is Native XAH”
No.
When you see XAH traded on the XRP Ledger DEX, you are usually seeing an IOU representation of XAH, not native XAH itself.
Even worse, multiple fake IOUs using the name “XAH” have appeared over time, created by scammers attempting to mislead users.
At the moment, the main legitimate XAH IOU on XRPL is issued by Gatehub:
- Currency Code: XAH
-
Issuer:
rswh1fvyLqHizBS2awu1vs6QcmwTBd9qiv
Native XAH only exists directly on the Xahau blockchain. This is similar to how wrapped versions of BTC or ETH exist on other blockchains without being the native assets themselves.
And this distinction matters because certain features only exist directly on Xahau, such as Balance Adjustment, which currently provides around 4%.
5. “Xahau Is Just XRP Ledger With Smart Contracts”
That explanation is far too simplistic.
Yes, Hooks are one of the biggest innovations introduced by Xahau. But Xahau also introduces new programmable dynamics and a different philosophy around financial automation.
The goal is not simply to “add smart contracts.”
The goal is to allow users to integrate custom business logic directly into the ledger itself. That fundamentally changes how financial systems can be automated.
6. “Hooks Are Dangerous Because They Can Do Anything”
Actually, Hooks were specifically designed with limitations in mind. Strict execution limits and deterministic behavior exist precisely to avoid many of the problems seen in more open smart contract environments. Those limitations are not weaknesses. They are part of the design philosophy.
Instead of allowing infinite complexity, Hooks prioritize:
- Predictability
- Efficiency
- Security
- Low operational costs
- Native integration
7. “Xahau Depends on Ripple”
Ripple does not own or control Xahau.
Xahau emerged after years of research and development surrounding Hooks technology. Originally, Hooks were expected to become part of XRP Ledger itself. However, after significant pushback, the developers behind the Hooks project decided not to abandon years of work and instead launched an independent blockchain where Hooks could exist natively: Xahau.
Like XRPL, Xahau is built using open-source technology and independent validators. Ripple has no governance control or any type of control over Xahau.
Interestingly, it was later announced that a certain level of programmability would be introduced to the XRP Ledger, beginning with features such as Smart Escrows, expected around late 2025. As of May 2026, those features have still not arrived in production.
8. “Xahau Is Trying to Compete With Every Other Blockchain”
The blockchain industry often frames everything as a constant war between ecosystems:
- One chain vs another
- One token vs another
- One community attacking another
But Xahau does not necessarily need to operate under that mentality. Financial institutions are free to use whatever technologies they consider useful. And in reality, most companies rarely depend on a single infrastructure provider.
An organization may simultaneously use:
- Multiple blockchains
- Traditional banking systems
- Private infrastructure
- Internal automation tools
Xahau does not need to “win” a blockchain war to be useful.
There’s also an uncomfortable reality within this industry:
Many blockchain companies directly or indirectly pay for institutional pilots and demonstrations through:
- PoCs
- Pilot programs
- Corporate demos
- Marketing partnerships
And in many cases, those institutions never end up using the public blockchain or native token at all. Yet the announcements are still heavily promoted to generate speculation and marketing narratives. That creates enormous confusion within crypto communities.
Xahau is attempting to follow a different philosophy. The goal is not to manufacture headlines. The goal is to build tools that can actually function in real regulatory and financial environments. And if institutions choose to combine Xahau with other technologies, they can. Because the objective is not to “win a competition.” The objective is to build useful technology.
Final Thoughts
Understanding Xahau requires looking beyond the usual blockchain narratives. Too often, people try to categorize every project using the same labels: Ethereum competitor, XRPL sidechain, smart contract platform, or DeFi chain. But Xahau was not designed to fit neatly into those categories. Its philosophy is different.
Instead of chasing maximum complexity, Xahau focuses on making financial automation more integrated, predictable, and usable directly at the ledger level.
Whether Xahau succeeds long term will ultimately depend on real adoption, real builders, and real utility, not marketing narratives or social media speculation.
And that is probably the most important thing to understand about Xahau: the goal is not to imitate what already exists, but to explore a different way of building programmable financial systems.
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