This article is from:Arkham
Compiled by|Odaily Planet Daily(@OdailyChina); Translator|Moni
Anatoly Yakovenko(@toly), the creator of the Solana blockchain, has become a leading figure in the blockchain industry and a well-known billionaire. This article will delve into his personal wealth.
As one of the most influential figures in the cryptocurrency space, Anatoly Yakovenko founded Solana, one of the most widely used blockchain platforms. Based on available information, the number of tokens he personally holds, and his equity stake in Solana Labs, his estimated net worth in 2026 could be between $500 million and $1.2 billion. The wide range is primarily due to significant recent fluctuations in the price of Solana's token.
Anatoly Yakovenko's Early Life
Anatoly Yakovenko was born in the Soviet Union and immigrated to the United States with his family in the early 1990s, settling in Illinois. He showed an early talent for computer science and engineering, eventually earning a degree in computer science from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, a top-tier institution in the field in the United States.
Yakovenko's academic background focused on distributed systems and compression algorithms, technical areas that later proved crucial for his innovations in blockchain. According to his LinkedIn profile (shown below), after graduation, he joined Qualcomm, where he worked on operating system-level software and distributed systems for over a decade, a period he describes as being a "grunt" or workhorse. However, this experience at a leading communications technology company gave him deep expertise in building systems that handle large-scale, high-throughput operations.
During his time at Qualcomm, Yakovenko also worked on technologies that required coordination across multiple devices and maintaining precise timing—a challenge conceptually similar to blockchain consensus mechanisms. He later had a brief stint at Dropbox, further deepening his understanding of distributed computing challenges in consumer-facing applications.
How Did Anatoly Yakovenko Get Involved in Cryptocurrency?
Like many others, Anatoly Yakovenko's initial foray into cryptocurrency began with Bitcoin mining. It is reported that he and a friend used the profits from mining to subsidize the cost of graphics processors for a side project they were developing together. This experience also gave him firsthand insight into the scalability limitations of Bitcoin and Ethereum, networks that could only process a small number of transactions per second, creating bottlenecks and high fees that seemed incompatible with mainstream adoption.
Rather than seeing these limitations as inherent flaws in blockchain technology, Yakovenko began exploring whether techniques from other fields could solve the throughput problem. He drew inspiration from his telecommunications background, specifically the concept of using time itself as a reliable reference point in a distributed system.
In November 2017, Anatoly Yakovenko published a white paper detailing the "Proof of History" technology, a cryptographic method for creating verifiable passage of time between events. This innovation allows network validators to process transactions in a predetermined order without requiring extensive communication between nodes, significantly increasing potential throughput. The Solana blockchain is fundamentally built upon this concept.
Soon after, Yakovenko recruited former Qualcomm colleagues Greg Fitzgerald and Stephen Akridge to help build a prototype. The team formally established Solana Labs in 2018 and secured initial funding to develop the protocol. Another co-founder of Solana, Raj Gokal, joined the project shortly after the Proof-of-History white paper was released, becoming the Chief Operating Officer of Solana Labs (Solana's core founding team is shown in the image above). Solana Labs launched its first testnet in 2018, followed by the mainnet beta in March 2020, entering the market during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Tracking Anatoly Yakovenko's On-Chain Holdings
At its launch, Solana minted 500 million SOL tokens, with 12.5% allocated to the founding team, including Anatoly Yakovenko. A Solana address starting with "9QgXq" is widely rumored to be associated with Anatoly Yakovenko (as pictured below), though this has not been confirmed. This wallet holds over 136,725 SOL tokens, most of which are staked. Early transactions transferred millions of dollars worth of SOL to this address. This wallet address is over five years old. If it indeed belongs to Solana co-founder Anatoly Yakovenko, his held SOL would be worth over $11 million.
Furthermore, by tracking the history of transactions from Anatoly Yakovenko's suspected staking accounts, it appears that related accounts have conducted large SOL transactions to multiple Solana addresses. For example, between August 2024 and November 2024, over 3 million SOL tokens were unstaked and transferred. Over 1.5 million SOL tokens remain staked across multiple addresses, including 9E8zG, JQ5jC, A6mJn, and 7pgzZ. If these addresses also belong to Anatoly Yakovenko, his SOL holdings would far exceed current estimates, approaching a value of nearly $122 million at current prices.
Another address suspected to be linked to Anatoly Yakovenko is the Solana domain name toly.sol, as Anatoly Yakovenko's username on X is Toly. Tracing this domain reveals its owner is an address beginning with "86xCn". This address currently holds various tokens worth over $1.3 million, but its value is primarily in illiquid tokens, so its actual liquid value is only about $16,500, equivalent to 203.8 SOL.
Tracking Anatoly Yakovenko's Off-Chain Holdings
In addition to holding tokens, Anatoly Yakovenko holds a significant equity stake in Solana Labs, the company primarily responsible for developing the Solana protocol and its related infrastructure. Although the exact percentage of his ownership is not publicly disclosed, it is estimated that he holds approximately 5% to 10% of Solana Labs.
As a private company, Solana Labs' valuation has not been publicly disclosed. Solana Labs has conducted multiple funding rounds in the past, with investments from prominent venture capital firms like a16z (Andreessen Horowitz), Polychain Capital, and Multicoin Capital. These investments have valued the company in the billions of dollars, with many estimating its worth between $5 billion and $8 billion. Based on these valuations, Yakovenko's equity stake could be worth between $250 million and $800 million, not including his personal token holdings.
Although the company's valuation is still partially tied to the market performance of the SOL token, this dual ownership structure—personal tokens and company equity—provides a degree of diversification for Anatoly Yakovenko's wealth. SOL token prices can be highly volatile, but company equity represents a more stable asset, especially as Solana Labs' business expands beyond protocol development to other blockchain infrastructure projects.
Beyond his stake in Solana Labs, Anatoly Yakovenko is an active angel investor and has invested in over 40 companies to date. Some of these have grown into giants within the Solana ecosystem, including liquid staking service providers Jito Labs and Solayer, perpetual DEX Drift Protocol and Infinex, and staking infrastructure project Helius.
Who Owns the Most Solana?
As an emerging blockchain, Solana has come a long way since its inception. Today, Solana token distribution is diverse, including institutional investors, exchanges, founders, and retail participants. Major institutional holders include the Solana Foundation Treasury, cryptocurrency exchanges holding tokens on behalf of users, Solana ETFs, and staking service providers.
However, based on available data, the largest holder of SOL tokens is likely the winning bidder(s) from the FTX bankruptcy auction. Following the collapse of the centralized exchange FTX, the SOL tokens held in its assets were auctioned off as part of the liquidation process. In this process, 41 million SOL tokens were sold, with Galaxy Digital and Pantera Capital acquiring the majority. Although these tokens were subject to lock-up and vesting schedules, about 60-70% of the sold SOL has likely been unlocked and may have been sold. Considering this, Galaxy Digital might still hold approximately 6-8 million SOL, while Pantera might hold around 3-5 million SOL.
In 2025, the Solana Foundation Treasury companies came into focus. Due to highly publicized holdings, the largest SOL holder among these is the Solana Foundation Treasury company Forward Industries (pictured below), which currently holds 6.9 million SOL tokens (worth $583 million), representing 1.115% of the total SOL supply. Other Solana Foundation Treasury companies lag far behind; the next nine companies combined hold only about 1.5% of the total SOL supply.
Regarding custody service providers, some centralized exchanges also hold SOL tokens on behalf of users. For instance, Binance's latest proof-of-reserves shows the exchange holds over 24.2 million SOL tokens. Similarly, ETF providers have become major holders of SOL. The Bitwise Solana Staking ETF (BSOL) holds over 5.5 million SOL tokens and is currently the largest spot SOL ETF.
Among individual holders, while Anatoly Yakovenko likely ranks highly, he may not be the individual holding the most SOL tokens. Other Solana Labs co-founders and early team members also received significant allocations of SOL tokens. Furthermore, some early private investors may hold larger quantities of SOL than the Solana Labs co-founders themselves.
Anatoly Yakovenko's Net Worth Fluctuates Significantly with the Market
Over time, Anatoly Yakovenko's net worth has likely been closely tied to Solana's market performance, experiencing its dramatic volatility (the chart below shows the price movement of Solana's token in recent years). In November 2021, when the SOL price reached a cycle high of around $260, his combined token holdings and company equity could have pushed his net worth over $2 billion, potentially even approaching $3 billion, depending on the valuation of his Solana Labs equity.
Conversely, the crypto bear market of 2022 severely compressed the value of Anatoly Yakovenko's assets. With the SOL price dropping below $10 at one point, the value of his token holdings fell more than 95% from their peak. Network outages during this period, coupled with Solana's close association with FTX and Alameda Research, created additional negative pressure on the token's price and ecosystem sentiment. Assuming his net worth moved in line with market fluctuations, it might have dipped below $100 million during the bear market.
However, as the market returned to a bull run between 2023 and 2025, Anatoly Yakovenko's net worth likely grew accordingly. Combined with the increasingly mature equity value of Solana Labs (currently estimated between $4 billion and $10 billion), it likely pushed his net worth back into the multi-billion dollar range.
At the beginning of 2026, the cryptocurrency market experienced a sharp crash, and the Solana price fell below $100. Estimates for Anatoly Yakovenko's net worth are generally maintained between $500 million and $1.2 billion, depending on the liquidity of the held tokens and the valuation of the Solana Labs equity stake.
Conclusion
As of early 2026, Anatoly Yakovenko remains one of the core architects of the digital economy, with a net worth that has fluctuated alongside the maturation of the Solana ecosystem. Although the crypto market crash in early 2026 reduced his wealth from its multi-billion dollar peak, his financial situation remains robust, bolstered by his equity in Solana Labs and a portfolio of early-stage investments.
From a grunt engineer working hard for a decade in networking companies to a crypto billionaire building a blockchain that rivals Bitcoin and Ethereum, Anatoly Yakovenko's influence on the crypto industry is evident. Solana has evolved from a high-speed blockchain into a hub encompassing institutional finance, stablecoin payments, trading, and more. Yet, it seems like everything is just beginning.





