Most people who buy SOL on an exchange like MEXC know the token — but far fewer know the organization working behind the scenes to make Solana a lasting, reliable blockchain.
The Solana Foundation is that organization, and understanding what it does helps you understand how Solana continues to grow as a blockchain ecosystem.
This article covers the Foundation's mission, how it funds builders and validators, and the major upgrades shaping Solana's future right now.
Key Takeaways
The Solana Foundation is a non-profit based in Zug, Switzerland, focused on making Solana more decentralized, secure, and widely adopted.
Its Grants Program funds open-source tools and public-good projects on a rolling basis — no fixed deadline to apply.
The Solana Foundation Delegation Program (SFDP) supports smaller validators by delegating SOL directly to them, helping decentralize the network.
Firedancer, a new validator client that went live in December 2025, eliminates Solana's single-point-of-failure risk by introducing a fully independent codebase.
The Alpenglow upgrade (SIMD-0326) — passed with 98.27% validator support — targets block finality of approximately 150 milliseconds, down from the current 12.8 seconds.
The Foundation is now pushing Solana as the default payment rail for AI agents, with over 15 million AI-driven transactions already processed through the x402 standard.
Its core mission is straightforward: drive the decentralization, adoption, and security of the Solana network.
What makes it different from Solana Labs is its role.
Solana Labs builds the technology.
The Solana Foundation acts more like a guardian — funding public goods, supporting validators, and ensuring the network doesn't become too dependent on any single team or codebase.
President Lily Liu, a former CFO and Stanford-educated entrepreneur, leads the Foundation with a clear philosophy: a blockchain foundation should fund infrastructure, not compete with the builders on it.
The Foundation runs two flagship programs that directly fuel Solana's growth: the Grants Program and the Delegation Program.
Both exist for the same reason — to make Solana more open, more decentralized, and more useful for everyone building on it.
That means open-source tools, infrastructure upgrades, proof-of-concept experiments, and community-facing initiatives that the private market wouldn't fund on its own.
Applications are reviewed on a rolling basis, which means there's no fixed deadline — anyone from an independent developer to a university research team can apply at any time.
The Foundation offers two tracks: standard grants for non-commercial public goods, and convertible grants for projects that may have a commercial angle but still deliver broad ecosystem value.
Funding ranges vary by project scope, with recent grants supporting everything from RPC infrastructure to real-world asset (RWA) projects — a signal that the Foundation is actively expanding what it considers worth funding.
Running a Solana validator is expensive.
The Solana Foundation Delegation Program (SFDP) helps smaller validators get started by delegating SOL directly to them — essentially lending them staking power so they can earn rewards, build a track record, and attract outside stake. The Foundation currently stakes roughly 35 million SOL across 569 validators, with an average delegation of around 60,000 SOL per participant.
The goal is practical: a Solana network where no single data center or hosting provider holds too much influence is a Solana network that's genuinely hard to shut down.
The Solana Foundation doesn't just manage today's network — it's actively funding the architecture of tomorrow's.
In 2025 and 2026, three major developments show exactly where it's placing its chips.
For most of Solana's history, every single validator on the network ran the same software — a fork of the original Solana Labs codebase called Agave.
That's a serious single point of failure: one bug in one codebase could bring the whole network down.
That's exactly what happened during Solana's February 2024 outage.
Firedancer, developed by Jump Crypto and supported through the Foundation's delegation infrastructure, is a from-scratch rewrite of Solana's validator software — same protocol, entirely different code. More importantly, if Agave encounters a critical bug, Firedancer keeps running.
That resilience is what the Foundation has been working toward, and the Firedancer Delegation Program now incentivizes validators to run it by offering dedicated stake to early adopters.
Even Firedancer isn't the biggest upgrade on the horizon.
Alpenglow is a fundamental rework of Solana's consensus protocol — the underlying system that determines how validators agree on the state of the network. Currently targeted for mainnet in Q3 2026, Alpenglow aims to dramatically reduce block finality times — targeting approximately 150 milliseconds, compared to the current multi-second confirmation windows on mainnet. That's not just a speed improvement — it's what high-frequency trading applications and institutional finance need to take Solana seriously as a settlement layer.
The Foundation has been actively communicating progress through its blog and transparency reports, positioning Alpenglow as the upgrade that completes Solana's transition from fast consumer chain to institutional-grade infrastructure.
Speed and decentralization mean nothing if the ecosystem isn't secure.
In April 2026 — days after a $270 million exploit hit the Drift Protocol — the Solana Foundation launched two coordinated security programs: STRIDE and SIRN. STRIDE (Solana Trust, Resilience and Infrastructure for DeFi Enterprises) is a structured audit program that independently evaluates DeFi protocols on Solana against eight security pillars.
Protocols with over $10 million in TVL that pass the evaluation receive ongoing threat monitoring, fully funded by the Foundation.
Protocols above $100 million TVL can access foundation-funded formal verification — a mathematical process that checks every possible execution path in a smart contract.
Alongside STRIDE, SIRN (Solana Incident Response Network) brings together elite security firms including OtterSec, Neodyme, and ZeroShadow for real-time, 24/7 coordinated incident response.
The Foundation's message was clear: security scales with the ecosystem, and the Foundation will fund the infrastructure to match that scale.
Perhaps the Foundation's most forward-looking bet is one that barely mentions crypto at all.
In April 2026, the Solana Foundation ran a San Francisco billboard campaign with the headline: "Don't waste time with crypto."
The message wasn't anti-crypto — it was about where the Foundation believes crypto is heading.
Through the x402 micropayments standard, the Foundation is positioning Solana as the default payment rail for AI agents: software systems that can automatically pay for data, services, and compute without human involvement.
The Foundation reported over 15 million AI-driven transactions already processed through this system, signaling early traction for the x402 standard across the broader Solana ecosystem.
The core thesis: crypto's biggest future users won't be human beings clicking "send" — they'll be AI agents moving value at machine speed, on a network built for exactly that.
What is the Solana Foundation?
It is a non-profit organization based in Zug, Switzerland, dedicated to the decentralization, adoption, and security of the Solana network.
Who is the president of the Solana Foundation?
Lily Liu, a former CFO and co-founder of Anagram, currently serves as the Solana Foundation's president.
Where is the Solana Foundation located?
The Solana Foundation is headquartered in Zug, Switzerland, the same city that hosts several other major crypto foundations.
How is the Solana Foundation funded?
The Foundation holds a treasury of SOL tokens, which it uses to fund grants, validator delegations, and ecosystem security programs.
What does the Solana Foundation grants program fund?
It funds open-source projects, public infrastructure tools, and proof-of-concept initiatives that benefit the broader Solana ecosystem.
What is the Solana Foundation Delegation Program?
It is a program where the Foundation delegates SOL to validators that meet performance requirements, helping decentralize the network.
What is Firedancer and why does the Solana Foundation support it?
Firedancer is an independent validator client that eliminates Solana's single-point-of-failure risk; the Foundation backs its adoption through delegation incentives.
The Solana Foundation isn't a marketing department — it's the organization doing the unglamorous work of making Solana harder to break, easier to build on, and more useful to the world.
From funding open-source developers through the Solana Foundation grants program to backing Firedancer, Alpenglow, and AI payment infrastructure, it's steadily building something that outlasts market cycles.
If you're paying attention to what Solana is becoming, the Foundation is where the real story starts.