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Solana’s Alpenglow proposal, which seeks to slash the blockchain’s transaction finality to around 150 milliseconds, is expected to proceed after 99% have voted in support of it, with just two days left for voting.
The Alpenglow consensus protocol was unveiled in May by Anza — a Solana development firm spun out of Solana Labs — and has been described by ecosystem members as the biggest protocol upgrade in Solana’s history.
It would slash the current finality from 12.8 seconds to just 150 milliseconds, a near 100-fold speed increase that could put it on par with current internet infrastructure.
The governance process for Alpenglow kicked off on Aug. 21, and over 99.6% of votes cast so far have said “yes” to the proposal, Staking Facilities data shows.
Voting will close at epoch 842, which is expected to be complete on Tuesday at 1 pm UTC, according to Solanabeach.io.
The quorum threshold of 33% of votes has also been reached, meaning Alpenglow is now almost certain to pass if the current voter trajectory remains the same.

A successful implementation of Alpenglow would strengthen Solana’s case as one of the fastest layer-1 blockchains, surpassing Sui — which has transaction finality around 400 ms — and potentially even outperform standard Google searches, which return results in roughly 200 ms.
Transaction speed has been a key selling point for layer-1 blockchains seeking to compete with Bitcoin and Ethereum, the latter of which includes transactions in around 12 or 13 seconds but doesn’t reach finality until roughly 12 minutes later.
Alpenglow could expand Solana’s use cases far beyond payments, trading and gaming, Anza researchers Quentin Kniep, Kobi Sliwinski and Roger Wattenhofer said in May when the white paper was released.
“A median latency of 150 does not just mean that Solana is fast — it means Solana can compete with Web2 infrastructure in terms of responsiveness, potentially making blockchain technology viable for entirely new categories of applications that demand real-time performance.”
Alpenglow includes Votor and Rotor
The first of Alpenglow’s key components is Votor, which would process voting transactions and block finalization logic, aiming to finalize blocks in a single round if 80% of the stake is participating, and in two rounds if only 60% of the stake is responsive. It would replace TowerBFT.
The second is Rotor, a data dissemination protocol that would replace Solana’s proof-of-history timestamping system and aim to reduce the time it takes for all nodes to agree on the network state.
1/ Rotor is Solana’s new block propagation protocol introduced in the Alpenglow upgrade. It’s a single layer of relayers that replaces Turbine’s multi-hop, delivering blocks faster and more uniformly across the network 🧵 pic.twitter.com/0KhpLuLe8u
— Anza (@anza_xyz) August 13, 2025
Alpenglow won’t fix Solana’s network outages
The project’s white paper noted that switching to Alpenglow wouldn’t completely shield Solana from the network outages that it has experienced in the past.
Related: Solana lobby group adds $500K to Roman Storm’s defense war chest
Solana currently only has one production-ready client, Agave, meaning any security vulnerability in Agave can disrupt the entire Solana network.
However, a new independent validator client called Firedancer is set to launch on Solana’s mainnet later this year, which will provide client diversification for the network.
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Unlock the Secrets of Ethical Hacking!
Ready to dive into the world of offensive security? This course gives you the Black Hat hacker’s perspective, teaching you attack techniques to defend against malicious activity. Learn to hack Android and Windows systems, create undetectable malware and ransomware, and even master spoofing techniques. Start your first hack in just one hour!
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