From [Bip125](https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0125.mediawiki): > Explicit signaling: A transaction is considered to have opted in to > allowing replacement of itself if any of its inputs have an nSequence > number less than (0xffffffff - 1). > > Inherited signaling: Transactions > that don't explicitly signal replaceability are replaceable under this > policy for as long as any one of their ancestors signals > replaceability and remains unconfirmed. However, it looks to me like only "explicit" signaling is tested. See this part of the BIP125 pull request that was merged into Bitcoin Core: https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/6871/files#diff-7ec3c68a81efff79b6ca22ac1f1eabbaR841 It's very clear that incoming TXs are checked for conflicts (double spends) and if the conflicting TX does not explicitly signal RBF with its input sequence, then the new TX is rejected. If implicit signaling were implemented, I would expect to see a recursive check for the conflicting TX's mempool ancestors, or check some kind of flag stored with the TX metadata.