Algorand (ALGO) has released a detailed post-quantum cryptography roadmap committing the protocol to broad quantum resilience by the end of 2027, covering every layer from user wallets to its core consensus mechanism.
The announcement, made by Bruno Martins, chief technology officer of the Algorand Foundation, comes as governments and regulators race to set their own quantum security deadlines, and as researchers warn that cryptographic systems protecting blockchain networks could fail as early as 2030.
ALGO received renewed attention after this announcement, thanks in part to a March 2026 Google research paper that rated Algorand as likely the most quantum-ready blockchain among major Layer 1 networks.
The central question posed by the roadmap is: Can Algorand carry out a complete cryptographic overhaul across consensus, accounts and tools, without fracturing its existing developer ecosystem – before the arrival of a capable quantum computer?
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Why quantum computing is a real threat to blockchain security
Today’s blockchains rely on elliptic curve cryptography, a mathematical system whose security comes from the difficulty for a classical computer to reverse engineer a private key from a public key.
Quantum computers threaten to completely derail this hypothesis. A sufficiently powerful quantum machine could derive private keys from public addresses, meaning any exposed public key would become a liability rather than a secure identifier.
Google researchers said in their March 2026 paper that quantum computers may require fewer resources than expected to crack the cryptography protecting blockchain networks.
Most quantum security measures are either alarmist or dismissive, and none are helpful if you’re actually responsible for an active network.
Here’s what we do instead
–Bruno (@bmartins_) June 18, 2026
Researchers at the California Institute of Technology have separately hypothesized that a working quantum computer capable of this could be deployed before 2030. A Glassnode report noted that nearly 10% of Bitcoin’s supply is in addresses whose public keys are already exposed on-chain, structurally vulnerable as soon as that threshold is crossed.
Post-quantum cryptography (PQC) replaces elliptic curve methods with mathematical problems that remain difficult even for quantum machines, with lattice-based schemes being the leading candidates. Falcon, a network-based digital signature system selected by the US National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) for standardization, is Algorand’s chosen instrument for this transition.
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Algorand roadmap: what changes and when
Algorand is not starting from scratch. Falcon-signed proofs of state, which protect the historical integrity of the chain throughout cross-chain interoperability, have been available on mainnet since August 2022.
By early 2026, over 140,000 quantum-resistant transactions had already been recorded on Algorand’s mainnet, with the first fully signed Falcon transaction completed on November 3, 2025. The remaining vulnerability lies in the consensus layer, which still uses classic Ed25519 signatures for validator selection and block proposals.
The roadmap unfolds in three defined phases. In Q3 2026, native post-quantum accounts based on Falcon-1024, the higher security variant of the Falcon scheme, will be introduced at the protocol level alongside updates to the SDK and Pera wallet so that developers and users can create PQ accounts immediately.

Q4 2026 adds post-quantum multi-signature support for institutional wallets and treasuries; The Algorand Foundation will begin migrating its own treasury to PQ accounts during this phase, and investors will be able to stake directly from PQ-backed accounts.
The 2027 phase is the most technically complex. It targets a post-quantum verifiable random function (VRF), the mechanism that drives Algorand’s validator selection process, to replace the current elliptic curve-based version. It also introduces hybrid accounts combining classic and Falcon signatures, allowing institutions and protocols to maintain dual-stack operation during the transition rather than forcing a hard switchover.
The roadmap reflects architectural thinking similar to Cardano’s approach to incremental upgrades at the protocol level, where backward compatibility is preserved through difficult milestones.
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