Solana has introduced a new native subscription and allowance infrastructure directly on its blockchain, enabling developers to build recurring payment systems, delegated spending mechanisms, and billing solutions without relying on custom software or centralized payment processors. The initiative, known as Solana Subscriptions and Allowances, is now operational on the mainnet and is available as an open-source solution.
The program has undergone security reviews conducted by Cantina and Spearbit, allowing development teams across the Solana ecosystem to begin integrating the framework immediately. The launch represents a significant step toward simplifying the development of financial applications that require automated and recurring payment functionality.
Historically, developers seeking to implement subscription services on blockchain networks often faced lengthy development cycles. Building recurring billing systems typically requires custom infrastructure, extensive security audits, and integration with off-chain components. These requirements created challenges for businesses aiming to offer services such as software subscriptions, payroll platforms, contractor payments, and API billing entirely on-chain.
Solana’s new Subscriptions and Allowances framework provides a standardized, audited, and open-source solution for recurring payments, delegated spending, and billing directly on the blockchain.
The newly launched program offers three distinct payment structures designed to support a broad range of use cases.
The first model, known as Allowances, enables users to authorize spending up to a predefined limit with an optional expiration date. Authorized parties can utilize the approved funds until the spending cap is reached or the authorization period ends. This functionality is particularly relevant for artificial intelligence applications, allowing AI agents to operate within predetermined budgets while ensuring spending permissions automatically expire when conditions are met.
The system also supports multiple delegates simultaneously, allowing users to authorize various services at the same time without creating conflicts among permissions.
The second model, Recurring Delegations, permits users to authorize recurring payments within predefined limits on a specified schedule. For example, a user may authorize a recurring payment amount every two weeks, with spending limits resetting during each payment cycle. Since the payment terms are established by the user rather than the recipient, the framework is well-suited for payroll distribution and contractor compensation directly on-chain.
The third model, Subscription Plans, enables merchants to publish fixed pricing tiers on the blockchain. Customers who subscribe lock in the terms available at the time of enrollment, while payments are automatically processed according to the agreed schedule. Should a merchant wish to modify pricing, a new plan must be created, ensuring existing subscribers retain their original conditions.
Several companies participated as design partners during the development of the program and have either integrated the solution or announced plans to do so. These organizations include Helius, Confirmo, Dynamic, Majority, Mesh, and Meow.
Helius, a provider of RPC and blockchain data infrastructure, is utilizing Subscription Plans to enable customers to subscribe to API service tiers directly on-chain. This approach removes the need for third-party payment processors while automating recurring billing.
Dynamic, which specializes in wallet infrastructure, is incorporating the framework into its wallet solutions, allowing users to authorize recurring payments and subscriptions through a streamlined wallet interaction process. Meanwhile, Confirmo plans to leverage the system to automate stablecoin invoice collection for software and enterprise customers.
The infrastructure supports AI-driven spending controls, recurring payroll payments, and automated subscription billing, significantly reducing development complexity for blockchain-based applications.
The program is compatible with both SPL Token and Token-2022 standards, including support for confidential transfers. It has also undergone integration testing with Squads’ multisig solutions and Swig smart wallet configurations, broadening its utility across different operational environments.
The launch aligns with Solana’s broader strategy to strengthen its position within digital payments. According to the network, its payment infrastructure has been operational since 2020 and is utilized by organizations including Visa, PayPal, Western Union, and Fiserv.
By introducing native recurring payment infrastructure, Solana is expanding its blockchain payment ecosystem and making enterprise-grade financial automation more accessible to developers and businesses.
The company further indicated that the network continues to process substantial transaction volumes, supported by low transaction costs and rapid confirmation times. As demand for blockchain-based payment services grows, the introduction of native subscription and allowance functionality could accelerate adoption among enterprises, developers, and service providers seeking efficient on-chain financial operations.
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