Crypto has a lot of problems to worry about right now. Wars, hacks, regulation, oil prices, ceasefire deadlines. But somewhere in the background, a much bigger threat is quietly getting closer. Coinbase just released a 50-page report that lays it out in plain terms: quantum computers will eventually be powerful enough to crack the encryption that secures every major blockchain. And the industry is not ready.
The paper, authored by an independent advisory board that includes prominent cryptographers and academics like Dan Boneh of Stanford University, Justin Drake of the Ethereum Foundation, and Sreeram Kannan of Eigen Labs, concludes that while today’s blockchains remain secure, a future “fault-tolerant quantum computer” capable of breaking widely used encryption is increasingly plausible, and preparation must begin now.
The report is not alarmist. Nobody is saying quantum computers will break Bitcoin next week. What it is saying is that the transition to quantum-resistant security will take years, and anyone who waits until the threat is urgent has already waited too long.
What Quantum Computers Could Actually Break
Every cryptocurrency transaction relies on cryptographic signatures to prove that the person sending funds is the rightful owner. Those signatures are currently protected by mathematical problems that would take today’s computers billions of years to solve. A sufficiently powerful quantum computer could solve them in hours.
“Waiting for it to be urgent is not a good idea,” the Coinbase paper says, emphasising that transitions across blockchains, wallets, and exchanges could take years to execute safely.
The most immediate risk is something called “harvest now, decrypt later.” Attackers can collect encrypted blockchain data today, store it, and wait for quantum hardware to catch up. For long-held assets like Bitcoin in cold storage, this is not a hypothetical future problem. The data is already out there. The only question is when the hardware arrives to crack it.
Some assets may be more vulnerable than others. Bitcoin wallets that have already revealed their public keys could be targeted, while those still protected behind hash functions may be safer in the short term.
The Transition Will Not Be Easy
Quantum-resistant cryptography exists. It has been standardised by NIST and multiple implementations are available. The problem is that swapping out the encryption that underpins an entire blockchain is like replacing the engine of a car while driving it at 100 miles per hour.
Post-quantum digital signatures can be tens to hundreds of times larger than current ones, which could dramatically increase blockchain data costs and reduce throughput. One estimate in the report suggests that replacing today’s signatures with quantum-proof alternatives could expand block sizes by up to 38 times.
That is a staggering increase. A 38x expansion in block size would mean dramatically more storage, bandwidth, and processing power required to run a full node. Transaction fees could rise. Network speed could drop. The cure, if implemented carelessly, could be as disruptive as the disease.
Who Is Ahead and Who Is Behind
This is where it gets interesting for investors. Not every blockchain is in the same position. Some projects have been working on quantum resistance for years. Others have barely started.
Coinbase’s quantum computing advisory group identified Algorand and Aptos as front-runners in preparing for quantum computing threats. The report warns that proof-of-stake blockchains, including Ethereum and Solana, may face significant vulnerabilities if they fail to adopt quantum-resistant measures soon.
Algorand has already integrated quantum-resistant cryptographic tools into its mainnet, making it one of the first major blockchains to do so. Aptos has been building post-quantum features into its architecture from the beginning. Both are significantly ahead of the larger chains.
Bitcoin’s core protocol is actually more resilient than most people think, because its mining process and data structure are harder to attack with quantum computing. But wallet-level vulnerabilities remain a real concern, particularly for wallets that have already exposed their public keys through previous transactions.
Ethereum and Solana face a different challenge. As proof-of-stake chains, their validator systems depend on the same cryptographic signatures that quantum computers would target. The Ethereum Foundation has published a post-quantum roadmap, but the implementation timeline stretches years into the future.
Ripple announced a four-phase plan to make the XRP Ledger quantum-resistant by 2028, showing that even mid-cap projects are taking the threat seriously.
What This Means Right Now
Nobody needs to panic today. Quantum computers capable of breaking Bitcoin’s encryption do not exist yet, and most experts believe they are at least a decade away. But a decade is not a long time when the migration itself could take five to seven years.
The Coinbase report is the most authoritative industry assessment of the quantum threat to date. It was written by people who build the systems that need protecting, not by outsiders speculating about worst-case scenarios. When Stanford’s top cryptographer and the Ethereum Foundation’s lead researcher co-author a paper saying “start preparing now,” the industry should listen.
For investors, quantum readiness could become a factor in how blockchains are valued over the next few years. Projects that have already started the transition, like Algorand and Aptos, may carry less long-term risk than chains that are still in the planning phase. It is too early for this to be a primary investment thesis, but it is no longer too early to be a consideration.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.


















