Key Takeaways
What change are Solana developers proposing?
A new proposal, SIMD-0411, would double Solana’s annual disinflation rate and reduce token issuance over the next several years.
Why does this matter for SOL investors and validators?
Lower issuance may improve long-term supply scarcity, but it also reduces staking yields. It has raised concerns about validator incentives and network security.
Solana developers have introduced a new proposal to overhaul the network’s inflation schedule. This change could accelerate the chain’s move toward lower token issuance and reshape staking economics across the ecosystem.
If adopted, the proposal, known as SIMD-0411, would reduce SOL supply growth more aggressively, cutting annual issuance by 20–30% over the next several years.
The proposal, published in the Solana Foundation’s official improvement repository, aims to double the rate of Solana’s annual disinflation.
Instead of reducing inflation by 15% each year, the network would cut it by 30% annually until it reaches its long-term terminal inflation target of 1.5%.
What the proposal changes
Under current parameters, Solana is expected to reach its terminal inflation rate around 2032. With the new model, that date moves forward by nearly three years, arriving as early as 2029.
Modeling from the proposal estimates that the network would avoid minting around 22.3 million SOL between now and 2031 — the equivalent of nearly $3 billion at current market prices.
In practical terms, this reduces the amount of new SOL flowing into circulation each year, lowers staking yields gradually over time, and aligns Solana’s supply curve more closely with those of “low-inflation, high-usage” networks, such as Ethereum.
Community sees both benefits and risks
Supporters of the proposal argue that Solana’s current inflation schedule creates persistent downward pressure on the token, especially during periods of weak demand.
With ETFs absorbing more SOL than expected in recent weeks, many believe a faster move toward low inflation could reinforce long-term supply scarcity.
They also note that rising network activity, especially in stablecoin transfers, payments, and memecoin trading, means Solana can rely more on fee revenue, and less on high issuance, to reward validators.
But not everyone agrees.
Validator operators warn that sharply reducing inflation could disrupt the economic incentives that support the network’s security.
Staking yields would fall from roughly 6% today to 5% in year one, 3.5% in year two, and just over 2% by year three. Some caution that lower yields may encourage smaller validators to exit, thereby raising concerns about centralization.
At this stage, the proposal has not been approved. It must still pass community review, validation testing, and a network-wide governance process.
A significant moment for Solana’s monetary policy
If adopted, SIMD-0411 would represent Solana’s most consequential tokenomics adjustment since launch.
With ETF inflows rising and supply issuance under review, Solana is entering a key period where economic design, security costs, and long-term sustainability all converge.
Whether validators choose to prioritize scarcity or staking yield stability will determine the future shape of SOL’s monetary policy, and possibly its market trajectory heading into 2026.