Solana Foundation: Building Infrastructure for AI Agents
The Solana Foundation is positioning Solana as foundational infrastructure for the emerging agentic internet, where autonomous AI agents transact on-chain.

The Solana Foundation is positioning its network as foundational infrastructure for the “agentic internet,” a future where autonomous AI agents transact, settle, and coordinate on-chain at machine speed. With 15 million on-chain agent payments already processed and stablecoins emerging as the default payment rail for AI-driven services, the Foundation is making an explicit bet that Solana’s architecture can capture the settlement layer of an agent-driven economy.

Solana Foundation Chief Product Officer Vibhu Norby laid out the thesis at the Digital Asset Summit (DAS) in New York, framing Solana not as a trading chain but as the default settlement and coordination layer for software agents. Norby projected that 95 to 99% of all crypto transactions will eventually originate from large language models, a forward-looking claim that underscores how aggressively the Foundation is pivoting its narrative.

“Agentic payments are probably going to change the entire way that the internet is monetized,” Norby said at DAS, arguing that micropayments between autonomous agents could displace the attention-based economics of ads and subscriptions that dominate the current internet.

Why Solana’s Architecture Is Suited for Autonomous AI Agent Coordination

The technical case rests on three properties: throughput, cost, and finality. Solana’s sub-second block times and sub-cent transaction fees make it viable for the kind of high-frequency, low-value micropayments that autonomous agents require. An AI agent paying fractions of a cent for a compute task or data query cannot operate on a chain where gas fees exceed the transaction value.

65,000 TPS (peak capacity)

Average transaction fee: ~$0.00025

Source: Solana Foundation, cited as a core enabler for autonomous agent micropayments and high-frequency on-chain interactions.

This fee structure is what differentiates Solana from Ethereum and its Layer 2 rollups in the agentic context. Ethereum’s higher gas costs and slower finality create structural disadvantages for sub-cent micropayment use cases at agent scale, even with L2s like Base and Arbitrum reducing costs. Solana accounted for 77% of x402 transaction volume in December 2025, a protocol standard for machine-to-machine payments that serves as an early proxy for agentic activity.

The developer tooling ecosystem is already taking shape. SendAI’s Solana Agent Kit, ElizaOS, Crossmint’s GOAT toolkit, and Rig are active frameworks enabling developers to build AI agents that transact natively on Solana. This is not a roadmap promise; these tools are live and being used to build agent infrastructure today, similar to how infrastructure-focused funding rounds like Startale Group’s $63M Series A are accelerating blockchain development capacity across the industry.

On March 24, 2026, the Foundation launched the Solana Developer Platform (SDP), integrating Mastercard, Western Union, and Worldpay. The institutional partnerships signal an intent to operate within established compliance frameworks, a critical factor given that autonomous AI agent financial transactions remain a regulatory gray area in most jurisdictions.

Implications for the Broader AI-Crypto Stack and On-Chain Agent Economy

Solana’s agentic positioning does not exist in isolation. It sits within a broader AI-crypto stack where the settlement layer is only one component. Decentralized compute networks like Akash and Render handle the processing workloads that agents require, while Solana would handle the financial coordination, payments, and on-chain state management.

The distinction matters for investors and developers. What runs the agents (compute) and what settles their transactions (blockchain) are separate infrastructure layers, and capital is flowing into both. The emergence of institutional staking products across major chains reflects growing confidence in blockchain infrastructure as a long-term settlement layer, though the agentic use case adds a new dimension to that thesis.

Competing chains are not standing still. Base, backed by Coinbase, has launched its own agent wallet tooling. Purpose-built AI agent chains like Fetch.ai and Autonolas are targeting the same market from a different angle, building agent-native infrastructure rather than adapting a general-purpose L1. The competitive question is whether Solana’s existing throughput advantage and developer ecosystem can hold against chains designed specifically for agentic workloads.

The 15 million on-chain agent payments figure, while concrete, lacks granular context. The Solana Foundation has not disclosed the timeframe, dollar value, or top protocols driving that volume. Independent validation of the 77% x402 market share claim is also limited. These are the metrics to watch: if agentic transaction volume on Solana continues to grow and diversifies beyond a small number of protocols, the infrastructure thesis gains credibility.

The broader market context adds caution. SOL trades at approximately $91.59 with a market cap of $52.45 billion, while the Fear & Greed Index sits at 10, deep in extreme fear territory. The agentic internet narrative is generating positive developer and institutional attention, but it is doing so against a backdrop of significant market stress, a dynamic familiar to those tracking how institutional crypto products like spot Bitcoin ETFs have navigated volatile conditions.

1.5M+ daily active addresses

Trending upward through Q1 2026 as agentic use cases expand on-chain

Source: Solscan on-chain analytics, Q1 2026 trend data.

No specific regulatory framework for agentic payments has been finalized in the US or EU as of March 2026. The ability for AI agents to independently initiate, sign, and settle on-chain payments raises unresolved questions around AML/KYC compliance, liability for agent-executed transactions, and whether agents constitute money transmitters. The SDP’s integration of Mastercard and Western Union suggests the Foundation is anticipating these regulatory requirements rather than ignoring them.

The milestones that would validate the Solana Foundation’s thesis are measurable: sustained growth in agentic transaction volume, diversification of agent frameworks beyond early adopters, institutional deployment of agent-based payment rails through SDP partners, and regulatory clarity that permits autonomous agent transactions within compliance boundaries. Until those benchmarks materialize, Solana’s agentic internet positioning remains a credible strategic bet, grounded in real technical advantages and early adoption data, but not yet proven at the scale the Foundation envisions.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.