Key Takeaways:
- SIMD-0096 redirects 100% of priority fees to Solana block producers
- The proposal passed with 98.27% stakeholder approval in September 2025
- Validator revenue models shift as on-chain vote transactions are removed
Key Takeaways:

Solana's SIMD-0096 governance proposal redirects 100% of priority fees to block producers, reshaping validator economics on the network as the upgrade targets a mainnet launch in the third quarter of 2026.
"The change eliminates a structural cost center for validators while preserving staking mechanisms," according to the proposal text, which passed governance with 98.27% approval from stakeholders in September 2025. Roughly 52% of all staked tokens participated in the vote, per governance records.
Under the current system, priority fees — payments users attach to transactions for faster inclusion — are partially distributed to the network's fee pool. SIMD-0096 redirects the full amount to block producers, the validators who process transactions. The proposal is part of a broader infrastructure overhaul that includes the Alpenglow upgrade, which replaces Solana's Proof of History and Tower Byzantine Fault Tolerance mechanisms with new systems called Votor and Rotor, led by the engineering team Anza.
The economics of running a Solana validator shift meaningfully when priority fees flow entirely to block producers and on-chain vote transactions are eliminated. Validator operating costs decrease, which may affect the composition and distribution of the validator set over time. The Alpenglow upgrade, targeting mainnet deployment in Q3 2026, also reduces transaction finality from roughly 12.8 seconds to 100-150 milliseconds, making Solana more competitive with centralized exchange settlement speeds.
Validator cost structure shifts
The removal of on-chain vote transactions carries its own economic consequences. Validators currently broadcast votes continuously as a consensus signaling mechanism, consuming network resources. Eliminating those votes frees capacity for user transactions and reduces the computational load on validators, further lowering operational costs. Contentious governance upgrades typically see significant forum dissent or competing forks; SIMD-0096 had neither, reflecting broad validator consensus on the need to streamline incentives.
For SOL stakers, the proposal preserves existing staking mechanisms while improving validator ecosystem economics. Lower validator costs could translate to more competitive staking commission rates over time, though the proposal does not mandate any specific pass-through to stakers.
DeFi and institutional implications
DeFi protocols on Solana — including lending platforms, automated market makers, and liquidation engines — benefit indirectly from faster finality under Alpenglow. A 150-millisecond settlement window allows protocols to tighten safety margins without increasing risk, improving capital efficiency for users. Tokenized real-world assets, from Treasury bills to equities, require settlement reliability that a sub-150-millisecond chain can credibly offer in a way that a 12.8-second chain cannot.
The mainnet rollout of Alpenglow under the Agave 4.1 client, expected in Q3 2026, is the next milestone. Investors should monitor validator set composition and staking yield trends after the upgrade, as the removal of on-chain vote transactions and the priority fee redirect change the cost structure of validation. If validator operating costs fall significantly, the barrier to entry for smaller validators may decrease, potentially improving network decentralization over time.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.