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    You are at:Home»Business»4 predictions for privacy in 2026
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    4 predictions for privacy in 2026

    Earth & BeyondBy Earth & BeyondJanuary 1, 2026003 Mins Read
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    4 predictions for privacy in 2026
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    2025 was a big year for privacy onchain. Zcash, one of the original privacy coins, jumped more than 600%, and was one of the year’s biggest success stories. Ethereum and Solana announced major initiatives to bring privacy to their networks. And startups building privacy-preserving tech with zero-knowledge (ZK) proofs and fully homomorphic encryption (FHE) continued to gain traction.

    Influencers like Mert Mumtaz, CEO of Solana infrastructure firm Helius, said it was “Privacy Szn.” And many others said privacy was essential for institutional adoption, as companies generally don’t want to do business on public blockchains with fully transparent ledgers.

    So, what’s ahead for 2026? We asked five leading folks from the privacy space to make predictions.

    Privacy will become more practical

    Bobbin Threadbare, co-founder of Miden

    In 2026, it will become clear that privacy isn’t binary. Neither full transparency nor absolute privacy are workable in the real world because, while privacy is essential for honest users, it can also be used by criminals and other nefarious actors to evade law enforcement and harm the very same honest users. In 2026, people will start accepting the notion that we should be willing to make tradeoffs that curtail privacy in a limited number of contexts to make the protocols more threat-resistant (i.e., difficult to exploit by criminals and other nefarious actors). A good framework here could be to provide conditional privacy for high-risk transactions, while providing full privacy for low-risk transactions, mimicking, to some extent, how cash works in the real world.

    The year of private stablecoins

    Khushi Wadhwa, head of business development at Predicate

    In 2026, private stablecoins will emerge as a core layer of global payment infrastructure onchain. We will see increased development of stablecoins that embed configurable privacy by default, spanning selective disclosure, transaction amount obfuscation, and, in some cases, full sender-receiver anonymity. This growth will be driven by pragmatic payment settlement needs. Enterprises will require confidentiality to protect sensitive commercial relationships and treasury movements, while retail users will increasingly reject fully transparent payment rails. Importantly, these systems will not exist outside regulation; instead, they will integrate policy controls that allow compliance without sacrificing baseline privacy. The net effect will be a redefinition of what “compliant payments” mean onchain, with private stablecoins becoming the preferred medium for both institutional settlement and everyday transactions.

    Privacy will be industrialized

    Paul Brody, EY global blockchain leader

    2026 is the year that privacy starts to get industrialized onchain. Multiple solutions are out there and heading from testnet into production, from Aztec to Nightfall to Railgun, COTI, and others. Things will get more challenging, however, as few consumer-facing wallets support these capabilities yet and the approach to regulatory compliance will likely still be all over the map as well. Scale won’t come until many of these issues are resolved, but this is the beginning of a shift from theory to practice.

    ‘Threat-resistance’ will be normal

    Wei Dai, 1kx, Research Partner

    Threat-resistant onchain privacy – where blockchains are designed to be nearly impervious to data tampering and unauthorized tampering – will become the widely accepted default. Instead of fixating on idealistic, theoretical privacy guarantees, more projects will focus on shipping pragmatic privacy solutions that help individuals and businesses move onchain while deterring malicious actors from misusing privacy protocols to launder hacked funds. Threat-resistant privacy includes two categories of solutions: (1) throttled privacy solutions implement deposit delays and limit in-protocol transfers, and (2) responsible privacy solutions that operate without velocity limit, where an information custodian is responsible for tracing of the transaction graph in the event of any malicious hacks.

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