Umbra and Streamflow launch confidential token vesting on Solana
The integration lets projects distribute tokens to stealth addresses, shielding recipient identities from on-chain surveillance during vesting schedules.
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Add us on Google by Editorial Team May. 26, 2026Token vesting has always been a glass house. Every allocation, every recipient wallet, every unlock schedule sits on-chain for the world to see. For projects distributing tokens to team members, advisors, and early investors, that transparency has come with a cost: doxxing, targeted phishing, and the kind of unwanted attention that makes people reconsider whether getting paid in tokens is worth the headache.
Umbra and Streamflow are trying to fix that. The two projects have launched a joint integration on Solana that combines Streamflow’s vesting infrastructure with Umbra’s stealth address framework, allowing token distributions to happen confidentially and at scale.
How stealth vesting actually works
Streamflow handles the vesting contract, the unlock schedules, and the actual token flow. Umbra handles the privacy layer by generating stealth addresses for each recipient, so that when tokens land in a wallet, outside observers can’t link that wallet back to a specific person or entity.
AdvertisementIn more technical terms, vesting contracts are created through Streamflow’s existing platform. But instead of routing allocations to publicly known wallets, the tokens go to Umbra-generated stealth addresses. The recipient can claim and control the tokens, but their identity stays disconnected from the on-chain transaction. The vesting schedule itself remains auditable, meaning compliance teams and governance participants can still verify that tokens are being distributed according to plan. They just can’t see exactly who’s on the receiving end.
This matters most for three specific use cases: team allocations, advisor grants, and investor distributions. These are the categories where recipient privacy is most sensitive, and where public vesting has historically created the most problems.
The problem with transparent vesting
Public vesting schedules also create market dynamics that projects would rather avoid. When traders can see exactly when a large advisor allocation unlocks, they can front-run the expected sell pressure. That puts downward price pressure on tokens before the recipient has even decided what to do with them.
Until now, projects on Solana had limited options. They could use multisig setups or off-chain agreements to obscure details, but those approaches sacrifice the auditability that on-chain vesting provides. The Umbra-Streamflow integration tries to thread that needle: private recipients, public proof that the schedule is being honored.
Solana’s privacy gap, and why this fills it
Umbra itself originally launched on Ethereum, providing stealth payment infrastructure for that ecosystem. Solana’s speed and low transaction costs made it attractive for token launches and DeFi activity, but its privacy tooling lagged behind. Projects launching tokens on Solana had to accept full transparency or build custom workarounds.
By bringing stealth address technology to Solana’s most common vesting platform, this integration gives projects a native privacy option without forcing them off-chain or onto another network. Streamflow already handles token locks, payment streaming, and distribution for Solana projects. Adding stealth addresses makes it competitive with Ethereum-based alternatives for deals where confidentiality is a requirement.
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