
Solana validator clients Anza and Firedancer have introduced a test version of Falcon, a post-quantum signature solution built to prepare the network for future quantum risks.
Summary
- Anza and Firedancer added early Falcon versions to prepare Solana for possible future quantum attacks.
- Jump Crypto said Falcon-512 has the smallest signature among selected NIST post-quantum standards.
- The teams said Falcon can protect Solana without causing major network performance issues.
The update comes as blockchain developers assess how quantum computers may affect public-key cryptography. Falcon aims to give Solana a ready option if stronger quantum protection becomes needed.
Anza and Firedancer said Falcon was designed for high-throughput blockchain use. The teams said it can be activated “if and when the time comes,” referring to the possible point when quantum computers can break current encryption systems.
Jump Crypto, the team behind Firedancer, said Falcon-512 offers the smallest signature among post-quantum signature standards selected by the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology. Smaller signatures may help Solana protect speed, bandwidth, and storage efficiency.
Jump Crypto says performance should remain stable
The teams said the migration process would be manageable and fast when required. They also said network performance should not face a major change from the shift.
“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,” the announcement said.
Jump Crypto added that Falcon signature verification is not hard to implement. It also said signing happens off-chain, which may reduce pressure on Solana’s network during normal activity.
Moreover, Anza and Firedancer said they researched post-quantum tools separately before reaching the same view. Both teams agreed that Solana needs a clear quantum readiness path before any future threat becomes active.
The two clients have already added early Falcon versions to their GitHub repositories. Data from Anza’s GitHub account shows work on Falcon has been underway since at least Jan. 27, 2026.
Quantum concerns continue across crypto
Falcon is not the first quantum-related tool in the Solana ecosystem. Blueshift’s Winternitz Vault has offered optional quantum security on Solana since January 2025, but it is not a protocol-level upgrade.
The wider crypto sector continues to debate quantum threats. Google and California Institute of Technology researchers recently said useful quantum computers may arrive sooner than earlier estimates. Google also claimed such systems may one day break Bitcoin cryptography within ten minutes.
However, some industry figures have played down the near-term risk. Blockstream CEO Adam Back said current quantum computers remain “essentially lab experiments” and argued that a real threat may still be decades away.

