TLDR:Coinbase’s Quantum Advisory Board named Algorand and Aptos the most quantum-prepared layer-1 blockchains in April 2026.Algorand deployed its first live post-quantum transaction using Falcon-1024 signatures on mainnet in November 2025.Algorand’s consensus layer still relies on classical Ed25519 signatures, leaving it short of full quantum resistance today.ALGO surged roughly 50% in early April after Google’s Quantum AI paper cited Algorand 32 times in March 2026.Algorand is drawing renewed attention as one of the few major blockchains with live post-quantum cryptography on mainnet. A Coinbase Quantum Advisory Board paper released April 21 named Algorand and Aptos as the two layer-1 networks best prepared for the quantum shift. Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana remain in planning or early-transition stages. The 50-page report was produced by researchers from Stanford, UT Austin, the Ethereum Foundation, and several other institutions. It is the board’s first formal position paper on quantum computing and blockchain.What Algorand Has Already Deployed Against Quantum ThreatsAlgorand’s post-quantum work dates to 2022 with the rollout of State Proofs. These compact certificates attest to the ledger’s state every 256 rounds using Falcon signatures. https://t.co/CTip52DW5j— BSCN (@BSCNews) April 23, 2026Falcon is a lattice-based scheme that NIST has formally standardized. The chain’s historical record has therefore carried quantum-secured attestations for roughly four years.The more operationally significant step came on November 3, 2025. The Algorand Foundation executed the first post-quantum transaction on live mainnet using Falcon-1024 signatures. That transaction moved a real asset on a public blockchain, not a testnet. No hard fork was required to make it happen.Falcon verification was added as a native primitive inside the Algorand Virtual Machine. Users generate a Falcon keypair and spend funds through a logic signature. The Foundation also released a Falcon Signatures CLI so developers can do the same. That tool removes the need for builders to write their own cryptographic code from scratch.The Coinbase board noted that Algorand lets users create quantum-resistant accounts without a protocol-wide migration. That design stands in contrast to networks requiring large, coordinated transitions. It places Algorand meaningfully ahead of most layer-1 competitors on this specific measure. As the board put it, “@Algorand is one of very few major layer-1s with real, working post-quantum tools in production, not roadmap commitments. That is a defensible lead. Not a finished job.”Where Algorand Still Falls Short on Full Quantum ResistanceDespite its progress, Algorand is not fully quantum-resistant today. The protections in place cover the ledger’s history and user-level transactions. However, the core of consensus remains classical. Block proposals and committee voting still depend on Ed25519 signatures.Validator selection also uses a non-post-quantum Verifiable Random Function. The Coinbase board flagged this gap directly in its April 21 report, titled “Quantum Computing and Blockchain.” Algorand’s own post-quantum technology page acknowledges the same limitation. The protocol team has publicly stated these components are next on the upgrade list.Chris Peikert, Algorand’s Chief Scientific Officer, has led much of this research. His foundational work contributed directly to Falcon’s cryptographic design. The network was built with cryptographic agility, meaning primitives can be swapped without a full rebuild. That structural flexibility gives Algorand room to close the remaining gap.The market has responded to this growing post-quantum profile. ALGO rallied roughly 50% in early April after Google’s Quantum AI paper referenced Algorand 32 times on March 31. The token was trading near $0.10, with a market cap of around $914 million, on April 22. Whether the “one of few” label holds will depend on whether consensus upgrades arrive in 2026 or 2027, as the team has indicated.The post Is Algorand One of the Few Quantum-Resistant Blockchains? Here’s What the Data Shows appeared first on Blockonomi.