Google Cuts The Qubits Needed To Break Ethereum By 20X, But There’s A Plan
- A Google Quantum AI paper published in March 2026 cut the estimated hardware needed to break Ethereum’s account security by 20 times.
- The quantum threat moved from theoretical to scheduled, and across the blockchain industry, only one network is visibly preparing.
- Earlier research estimated that cracking the signature scheme protecting every Ethereum account would require tens of thousands of logical qubits.
- Google’s latest work puts the figure at roughly 1,200.
What Happened
The Foundation launched the Poseidon Prize, a $1 million research award targeting improvements in hash-based cryptographic primitives. This work builds on three post-quantum cryptography standards that NIST finalized in August 2024.
Near-term, EIP-8141, which introduces native account abstraction and allows accounts to choose their own signature scheme, is under consideration for the Hegotá hard fork planned for the second half of 2026.
For users who want to act now, the Foundation’s Kohaku project lets anyone deploy a quantum-resistant smart account using the ERC-4337 account abstraction standard, no hard fork required, for roughly $0.07 on the Layer 1 testnet.
Market Context
A Google Quantum AI paper published in March 2026 cut the estimated hardware needed to break Ethereum’s account security by 20 times. The quantum threat moved from theoretical to scheduled, and across the blockchain industry, only one network is visibly preparing.
Earlier research estimated that cracking the signature scheme protecting every Ethereum account would require tens of thousands of logical qubits. Google’s latest work puts the figure at roughly 1,200. Google found the revised estimate credible enough to set an internal 2029 deadline for migrating its own systems.
Why It Matters
Ethereum uses ECDSA (elliptic curve digital signature algorithm) to verify every transaction. When an account sends a transaction, it exposes its public key on-chain. A sufficiently powerful quantum computer could derive the private key from that exposure and drain the wallet.
The quantum risk to Ethereum holders extends further: validator signatures, data availability commitments, and the zero-knowledge proof systems underpinning most rollups all rely on mathematics that a sufficiently powerful quantum computer could break.
The Ethereum Foundation formed a dedicated Post-Quantum Security team in January 2026, led by Thomas Coratger, and tracks its work publicly at pq.ethereum.org. Justin Drake, one of Ethereum’s most prominent researchers, has identified post-quantum risk security as a top strategic priority.
Full protocol readiness targets approximately 2029, the same deadline Google set for its own systems. BeInCrypto’s full breakdown of Ethereum’s quantum roadmap covers the broader fork milestones in detail.
No other major blockchain has matched Ethereum’s institutional response. Bitcoin, Solana, and others face similar underlying vulnerabilities: ECDSA is the dominant signature scheme across the industry. None has formed dedicated post-quantum security teams or published comparable roadmaps.
Details
Why the Revised Estimate Changes Everything
Today’s quantum hardware cannot do this. But 1,200 logical qubits is a number engineers can plan around, not dismiss. A small portion of Ethereum’s dormant funds, roughly 0.1%, already sit in accounts that have exposed their public keys and are technically vulnerable now.
What Ethereum Is Building
The Rest of the Blockchain Industry
The 1,200-qubit figure is not a guarantee, and significant engineering obstacles remain before quantum hardware reaches that threshold. But a 20-times downward revision in the threat estimate, from one of the world’s most advanced quantum computing programs, is not a number the rest of the blockchain industry can keep treating as a future problem.
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