The Ethereum Foundation has launched a resource hub showcasing its efforts to address post-quantum security on the network. The foundation disclosed this in a post on X, noting that the hub provides all information on how Ethereum will survive quantum security threats.
The hub includes information on the post-quantum roadmap, how post-quantum affects Ethereum protocol layers, and other key resources. It is the result of collaboration among several Ethereum teams, led by the Post Quantum and Cryptography teams.
According to the Ethereum Foundation, the work to counter the risks of Quantum computing has been ongoing for over 8 years. This has led to coordinated efforts across all Ethereum Foundation teams to enable the transition to Quantum resistance.
On the execution layer, efforts are underway to enable quantum-safe resistance through account abstraction. The team also plans to replace the validator signature scheme with a quantum-resistant hash-based signature on the Consensus layer while using post-quantum cryptography on the data layer.
Ethereum post-quantum roadmap. Source: Ethereum Foundation
All these and other initiatives are covered in the Ethereum Post Quantum roadmap, which was recently updated on March 19. Based on the roadmap, the medium-term target for making the network quantum-resistant is 2029. However, there are longer-term initiatives from 2030 onwards.
According to the Post Quantum resource hub, these efforts align with the commitment to ensure Ethereum survives any fundamental shift in information processing. While it noted that any quantum computing capable of breaking public key cryptography is still years away, it acknowledged the need to start preparing.
It reads:
“We do not believe a cryptographically relevant quantum computer is imminent. But migrating a decentralized, global protocol takes years of coordination, engineering, and formal verification. The work must begin well before the threat arrives.”
Meanwhile, the latest announcement highlights the Ethereum Foundation’s focus on network improvements. In the past few months, the foundation has introduced several initiatives, including increasing the bug bounty to $1 million for critical bugs while announcing FCR for faster L2 deposits.
This appears to be part of efforts to improve Ethereum’s security and scalability as the network gains more institutional adoption. However, the post-quantum initiative could be the Ethereum Foundation’s most ambitious effort.
Still, it would address major concerns around how quantum computing could affect blockchain networks. These concerns led the Ethereum Foundation to designate quantum security as a top strategic priority earlier this year.
Despite the latest development, ETH fell almost 2% today amidst a widespread market crash. With Bitcoin falling below $70,000, ETH also declined and is now down 8.84% in the past seven days.
ETH has lost almost 30% of its value since 2026 started, even though it has seen slight gains in the last 30 days. The asset struggle is emblematic of the crypto sector, with minor bounces while general performance remains down.
The post Ethereum Foundation Unveils Post-Quantum Threat Roadmap appeared first on The Market Periodical.


