Two of Solana’s most-used validator clients have implemented a test version of a new post-quantum signature solution, Falcon, to help prepare the Solana network for future quantum threats.
In an announcement on Monday, Anza and Firedancer said Falcon is built for “high-throughput blockchain use” and that it can be activated “if and when the time comes” — an apparent reference to Q-Day, the point at which quantum computers become powerful enough to break public-key encryption.
“The migration work is manageable, the transition can happen quickly when the time is right, and network performance is not expected to see a meaningful impact.”
Source: Solana Foundation
Concerns that quantum computers could eventually break blockchain cryptography have fueled worries about private keys and wallet security, prompting broader debate over how the sector should prepare as the technology develops.
One of those concerns has revolved around building quantum solutions that don’t impair blockchain performance by increasing bandwidth and storage.
To address that issue, Jump Crypto, the crypto infrastructure platform behind Firedancer, said Falcon-512 was built to generate the smallest signature currently among the US National Institute of Standards and Technology’s selected post-quantum signature standards.
It added that Falcon signature verification is “not complex to implement” and that signing is executed off-chain.
Solana ecosystem aligned with quantum plan
Anza and Firedancer said they independently researched quantum solutions and both concluded that quantum readiness is necessary before agreeing to build Falcon.
Both validator clients have implemented an initial version of Falcon in their GitHub repositories.
Data from Anza’s GitHub account shows that the development team has been working on Falcon since at least Jan. 27, 2026.
Falcon isn’t the first quantum solution floated in the Solana ecosystem.
Blueshift’s Winternitz Vault has offered quantum security to Solana since January 2025, though it was designed as an optional add-on for users and thus isn’t a protocol-level upgrade.
Related: Google targets 2029 post-quantum migration as threats draw nearer
The push comes as Google and California Institute of Technology researchers said last month that functional quantum computers could arrive sooner than expected and that they require far less computing power to break cryptography than previously thought.
Google even claimed that quantum computers could potentially break Bitcoin’s cryptography within ten minutes, allowing hackers to perform an “on-spend” attack.
However, Blockstream CEO Adam Back said current quantum computers are “essentially lab experiments” and that no real threat will emerge for decades.
Magazine: Bitcoin may take 7 years to upgrade to post-quantum: BIP-360 co-author
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