- Quantum computing is becoming a serious long-term threat to crypto encryption systems
- Bitcoin and Ethereum are still years away from fully quantum-resistant upgrades
- Some blockchain projects already run post-quantum cryptography live on mainnet
The crypto industry is finally starting to treat quantum computing like a real security threat instead of a distant science-fiction problem. According to recent reporting from the Financial Times, developers and blockchain companies are accelerating efforts to prepare for a future where quantum machines may eventually break the cryptographic systems protecting most digital wallets today.

The problem is not immediate panic tomorrow morning. The concern is what security experts call “harvest now, decrypt later,” where attackers collect encrypted blockchain data today knowing future quantum hardware could potentially crack it years later.
Why Quantum Computing Threatens Crypto
Most crypto wallets rely on public-key cryptography. Your wallet address is public, while your private key remains secret. The entire system depends on the fact that classical computers cannot realistically reverse-engineer private keys from public addresses within any useful timeframe.
Quantum computers work differently. Instead of processing information traditionally, they use qubits capable of existing in multiple states simultaneously. That allows them to solve certain mathematical problems dramatically faster than classical systems ever could.
For blockchain networks using elliptic curve cryptography, which includes Bitcoin and Ethereum, sufficiently advanced quantum hardware could eventually weaken or break wallet security entirely.
A Few Projects Already Prepared Early
Some blockchain projects began preparing years ago. QRL has operated quantum-resistant XMSS cryptography on mainnet since 2018, while Abelian launched lattice-based quantum-resistant systems in 2022. Algorand also implemented Falcon state proofs directly on mainnet last year.
Those systems are not theoretical research anymore. They are live production infrastructure already running today.

The much larger problem sits with dominant networks that still need massive migration efforts. Bitcoin’s proposed BIP-360 transition could take roughly seven years if adopted successfully, while Ethereum’s post-quantum roadmap currently targets around 2029. XRP’s roadmap aims for completion around 2028.
That means most major crypto ecosystems are aware of the issue but still mid-transition.
The Timeline Is Still Debated
Not everyone believes the threat is immediately urgent. Grayscale recently described quantum risks as somewhat overstated for the current cycle, arguing cryptographically relevant quantum machines likely remain years away, potentially beyond 2030.
Bernstein analysts, meanwhile, estimate the industry has roughly three to five years to begin serious migration efforts before the threat becomes genuinely dangerous.
And honestly, many security executives still worry far more about state-backed hackers and stolen private keys than quantum physics right now. But that doesn’t mean the long-term issue disappears.
Crypto Is Entering a New Security Era
The bigger takeaway is that post-quantum security is rapidly shifting from optional research into required infrastructure planning. Projects that ignored quantum risks previously are now being forced to accelerate development timelines as awareness grows.
The “harvest now, decrypt later” concern is especially important because blockchain data is permanent. Even if quantum computers cannot break wallets today, adversaries can still archive encrypted transaction histories now and potentially decrypt sensitive information later once the technology matures.
The crypto industry still has time to adapt. But the transition window is no longer theoretical, and the clock is very clearly running.











