Solana launches onchain governance and sets entry fee at 100,000 SOL staked

Solana launches onchain governance and sets entry fee at 100,000 SOL staked

  • News

  • Video

  • Research

  • Events

  • Data & Indices

Markets

Validators and the people who stake with them can now formally signal where the network should go through a new system called Solana Governance Proposals. Any validator with 100,000 SOL behind it can open one, and stakers can overrule how their validator votes.

By Shaurya Malwa|Edited by Omkar Godbole

Updated Jul 2, 2026, 8:48 a.m. Published Jul 2, 2026, 7:15 a.m.

2min read

Share this article

Solana sign (CoinDesk)

Summary

Programmable blockchain Solana has introduced a formal onchain governance system, its GitHub repository shows, giving its validators and token holders a direct, recorded vote on the network’s future for the first time.

The new system, called Solana Governance Proposals (SGPs), lets validators with at least 100,000 SOL ($7.70 million) staked, or locked on the network, propose major directional changes to the network. Think of it like a big company suddenly handing real voting rights to its shareholders after years of letting only the board and executives call the shots.

Each proposal is a plain-language question about whether the network should pursue a given direction, and it is settled by a vote weighted by how much SOL each participant has staked, with the tally recorded onchain and checked using a Merkle proof, a cryptographic method for confirming a vote belongs in the count without rerunning the whole tally.

The design neatly splits two questions that Solana had long handled together. An SGP, driven by the community and validators, asks the big picture question: “Should we do this?”

A separate, older track called a Solana Improvement Document, or SIMD, handles the follow-up: “Okay, how exactly do we do it?” – the technical details reviewed by the network’s core developers.

A yes on an SGP is a clear signal to proceed, with the engineering work that follows written up as one or more SIMDs.

The vote does not open automatically, however. A proposal has to first clear a support threshold of 15% of active stake before it moves to a ballot, a gate meant to keep the network from voting on matters few actually care about while letting core developers keep shipping routine changes without a referendum on each one.

Once that threshold is met, the process runs on a fixed schedule measured in epochs, the roughly two-day periods Solana uses to organize its operations.

To pass, a proposal needs a supermajority, at least two-thirds of the stake voting for or against it, with abstentions left out of the math. There is no minimum turnout requirement.

(Shaurya Malwa/CoinDesk)

What really stands out is that the system gives more power directly to delegators – the everyday users who stake their SOL with validators rather than running nodes themselves and collect staking rewards.

Delegators can now override their validator’s vote or cast a vote if the validator abstained, all weighted by their own stake. The Solana Foundation calls this “staker sovereignty,” a way to keep real voting power with the people who actually own the tokens, rather than handing it entirely to the validators they delegate to.

The launch lands as Solana has drawn renewed interest, with SOL up about 16% over the past week to around $78, per CoinDesk data, one of the few large tokens to gain while the broader market fell.

By CoinDesk Research

Jun 30, 2026

Zcash’s Tachyon upgrade aims to scale shielded payments, improve quantum readiness, and test whether its funding, security, and governance can hold.

Why it matters:

Zcash’s Tachyon upgrade aims to scale shielded payments, improve quantum readiness, and test whether its funding, security, and governance can hold.


 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *