Circle future-proofs Arc blockchain against quantum threats
Circle’s Arc blockchain said users will be able to create wallets that withstand future quantum computer attacks from day one.
By Omkar Godbole|Edited by Sam Reynolds Apr 6, 2026, 7:17 a.m. Make preferred on
What to know:
- Circle’s Arc blockchain said users will be able to create wallets that withstand future quantum computer attacks from day one.
- The blockchain plans to design its broader infrastructure, from cloud servers to encrypted connections, to withstand future quantum era.
Move over, legacy crypto. Circle’s Layer-1 blockchain Arc, built for stablecoin finance and institutional use, will debut with quantum-resistant features designed to survive a future in which traditional blockchains could crumble under quantum attacks.
"At mainnet, Arc will introduce a post-quantum signature scheme, giving users a practical design path to create quantum-resistant wallets," Arc said in an update Thursday. The update didn't mention the timeline for the mainnet launch.
It means that Arc is baking in quantum resistance from day one, unlike legacy chains, which may be waiting to add this feature later as a patch. So, when users create a wallet on the mainnet, they can choose a signing method that future quantum computers cannot break. This will ensure the long-term security and protection of crypto assets in wallets.
Every blockchain wallet relies on a digital signature or a super-secure key to prove you own your tokens and authorize transactions. When you hit “send” on your crypto, your wallet signs the transaction with this code, and the network verifies it before moving the coins. Today's computers aren't powerful enough to exploit this process, access your key, and drain your coins.
However, a future quantum computer could do so in at least two ways – a long attack and a short attack, as CoinDesk explained Sunday.
In short, what appears unbreakable today may not be tomorrow, which is what Arc is offering a quantum-resistant signing method right of the bat.
Arc’s announcement comes as Google’s report on quantum threats to Bitcoin and Ethereum's blockchains stirs fresh questions about the long-term reliability of digital ledgers. Developers, however, have been tackling the issue for months, proposing early solutions. At the same time, startups like Postquant Labs are exploring how quantum hardware could actually strengthen blockchain networks.
Arc’s choice to build quantum resistance from the ground up could make it especially attractive to institutions. The blockchain kicked off its testnet in October, using Circle’s dollar-pegged stablecoin USDC as the native currency for gas fees. USDC, with a market cap of around $77.5 billion, trails only tether USDT$0.9996 in size and stands out as a regulated stablecoin favored by institutions.
Arc's roadmap also includes ensuring that sensitive financial information remains private in the quantum era. Its near-term plan focuses on protecting private balances, confidential payments, and recipient information with quantum-resistant cryptography, not just quantum-resistant wallet keys. This way, the confidential financial activity of institutions using Arc will remain private.
The mid-term phase will focus on closing the backdoors through which a quantum attack could occur. These backdoors are the cloud servers validators run on, the hardware security modules that store keys, and the encrypted connections between nodes. This is akin to fortifying an entire building, not just the safe in your room closet.
In the long term, Arc will focus on the validator layer. Validators are the computers — run by trusted institutions — that confirm transactions and add new blocks to the distributed ledger.
Arc's current design finalizes a block in under a second, according to the official blog. This leaves a future quantum attacker an extremely small window of time to derive a user's private key and forge a signature. The risk, therefore, is small, but Arc is not ignoring it.
"Arc's roadmap is expected to target validator signature hardening after rigorous performance testing and the necessary tooling support are in place. Validator upgrades should happen when they are ready to preserve both resilience and network performance," it said.
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