Input Output Global, the primary software laboratory behind the Cardano blockchain, has halved its annual treasury funding request, asking the network’s decentralized governance body for $46.8 million to finance its 2026 operations.
The pullback marks a deliberate transition away from single-entity dominance, pivoting the ecosystem toward a future where specialized third-party firms shoulder a larger share of engineering duties.
The nine-part funding slate, down sharply from the $97.5 million approved for 2025, heavily prioritizes two critical mandates: capturing idle Bitcoin liquidity through new decentralized finance (DeFi) architectures and aggressively scaling the network’s base layer to achieve the ecosystem’s ambitious “Vision 2030” targets.
Cardano, currently ranking among the largest cryptocurrencies by market capitalization, manages a multi-million-dollar community treasury fueled by network transaction fees.
Historically, Input Output has commanded the lion’s share of these funds. However, under a revised operational strategy, the firm intends to taper its financial reliance on the treasury each year.
By the close of 2026, external contractors like Midgard Labs and VacuumLabs are expected to inherit substantial portions of the protocol’s internal development pipeline.
The largest allocation within the $46.8 million proposal centers on “Leios,” a sweeping consensus upgrade engineered to transform Cardano’s throughput capabilities.
Input Output executives argue that to reach the network’s Vision 2030 milestone, scaling from a current baseline of 800,000 monthly transactions to more than 27 million, the base layer requires a dramatic overhaul.
Currently, Cardano’s mainnet finality hovers around two hours, with transaction speeds clocking in at roughly 7 to 10 per second. This bottleneck has historically kept the blockchain out of high-frequency enterprise use cases, ceding ground to faster rivals such as Solana and various Ethereum Layer-2 networks.
Leios aims to bridge this divide without sacrificing the network’s foundational security. By introducing a mechanism known as Endorser Blocks and implementing committee-based validation, the upgrade is projected to increase transaction processing capacity by 10 to 65 times.
If successful, this would push Cardano past the 1,000 transactions-per-second threshold, enabling it to generate enough fee revenue to remain economically self-sufficient.
The development timeline is aggressive, with an early public testnet scheduled for June 2026 and a mainnet release candidate expected by year-end.
Coupled with impending Layer-1 improvements, Input Output is also funneling capital into off-chain scaling solutions.
This includes production-hardening the “Hydra” protocol, a state channel solution designed for zero-fee, sub-second micropayments, and advancing “Midgard,” a permissionless optimistic rollup.
Midgard leverages Cardano’s unique accounting model to enable single-party fraud proofs, a technical feat that could theoretically drive Layer-2 transaction costs below one cent.
While infrastructure upgrades dominate the technical roadmap, the most commercially aggressive initiative in the 2026 slate is “Pogun.”
The project is a bespoke decentralized finance engine built to transform the world’s most valuable crypto project, Bitcoin, into productive capital on the Cardano blockchain.
Input Output is betting that Cardano’s underlying architecture, the Extended Unspent Transaction Output (EUTXO) model, gives it a distinct structural advantage over Ethereum-style account models.
Because Cardano’s accounting framework shares a direct lineage with Bitcoin’s, developers can build highly deterministic financial logic with predictable fees and no risk of manipulation of maximum extractable value (MEV).
The Pogun rollout is staggered across three quarters. In the second quarter of 2026, the team plans to launch a non-margin credit market. Unlike conventional DeFi lending protocols that rely on volatile oracles and forced liquidations, Pogun’s credit market functions through bilateral agreements.
Borrowers and lenders will negotiate loan parameters directly, ensuring that collateral is forfeited only in the event of an outright default, not during temporary intra-day price swings.
This will be followed by a yield-generating decentralized application in the third quarter, allowing retail users to deploy capital into fixed-term strategies without managing complex negotiations.
Finally, the fourth quarter will see the deployment of a trust-minimized, BitVM-powered bridge. The bridge utilizes a 1-of-N security paradigm, meaning institutional custodians only need a single honest operator, which could be the institution itself, to guarantee the safety of their bridged Bitcoin.
To ensure these new L1 and L2 capabilities translate into measurable ecosystem growth, a significant portion of the budget is earmarked for revamping developer tooling.
Input Output has set a target to improve the growth rate of developer onboarding by at least 30% through a streamlined technical stack.
A core focus is optimizing Plutus, the compact programming language that underpins all Cardano smart contracts. Current execution costs and script preparation times act as a tax on developers.
The 2026 proposal outlines targeted expansions of cryptographic primitives and the removal of redundant scope-checking overhead, which currently inflates script preparation time by roughly 25%.
These upgrades are designed to lower on-chain execution costs, thereby making complex decentralized applications economically viable.
The firm is also introducing a “cardano-init” command-line interface and an OpenZeppelin-style library of standardized, auditable smart contracts.
By stripping away cumbersome prerequisites like Nix or native C library dependencies, the new tooling framework promises to reduce the time it takes for a new developer to launch a project from several days to mere minutes.