(Source: SOLANA)
The Solana Foundation has announced the launch of the Solana Developer Platform (SDP), an enterprise-focused development suite designed for financial institutions. SDP provides developers with APIs to rapidly build financial products on the Solana network.
SDP consolidates diverse core infrastructure services from the Solana ecosystem into a single platform. This unified approach enables enterprises to deploy and operate applications without integrating multiple separate tools. By lowering technical barriers, SDP marks a significant step toward broader enterprise adoption of blockchain technology.
(Source: SOLANA)
The Solana Developer Platform is structured around three primary modules, allowing enterprises to build customized financial services.
This module enables the creation of various digital assets, including:
Tokenized deposits
Stablecoins compliant with GENIUS regulations
Tokenized real-world assets (RWA)
The Payments module facilitates the movement of funds between fiat and stablecoins, supporting:
Fiat deposits (on-ramp)
Fiat withdrawals (off-ramp)
On-chain stablecoin payments
It supports a range of payment scenarios, such as B2B, B2C, and P2P transactions.
Expected to launch in late 2026, the Trading module will offer:
Atomic swaps
Asset custody vaults
On-chain FX trading
Currently, the Issuance and Payments modules are live.
Several major financial institutions began testing SDP at launch.
Participants include:
Mastercard: Exploring stablecoin settlement
Worldpay: Merchant payments and settlements
Western Union: Cross-border remittance applications
Their involvement signals growing interest from traditional financial institutions in blockchain-based payment infrastructure.
Catherine Gu, Head of Digital Asset Products at Solana Foundation, noted that SDP is designed so financial institutions can leverage blockchain capabilities directly through APIs, without handling complex underlying technology.
The platform integrates new Solana network features, such as:
Token extensions for permission controls
Privacy and access control mechanisms
Developer ecosystem services
More than 20 infrastructure partners have already integrated with SDP.
SDP partners fall into four categories: node infrastructure, wallet services, compliance and regulatory tools, and fiat on/off-ramp services.
Node infrastructure partners include Alchemy, Helius, QuickNode, and Triton One. By bringing these services together on a unified API platform, enterprises can more efficiently develop and deploy blockchain applications.
A key feature of SDP is its compatibility with AI programming tools like Claude Code and OpenAI Codex. Developers can leverage AI to generate code, accelerating the product development cycle. SDP currently provides a sandbox testing environment based on Solana Devnet, enabling developers to experiment and test before full deployment.
Participating enterprises have expressed optimism about SDP’s potential. Raj Dhamodharan highlighted that the platform allows Mastercard to explore direct stablecoin settlement on select blockchains, leveraging its global payment network. Malcolm Clarke stated that SDP can add an on-chain layer to Western Union’s cross-border payment network, streamlining integration of fiat and stablecoin processes. Ahmed Zifzaf added that the Payments and Issuance modules make it easier for merchants to access on-chain settlement and tokenized assets.
The launch of the Solana Developer Platform underscores the evolution of blockchain infrastructure toward enterprise applications. Through API-driven integration, SDP aims to lower the technical barriers for financial institutions entering Web3, combining payments, asset issuance, and trading capabilities. As more enterprises explore on-chain financial solutions, platforms like SDP may become a critical bridge between traditional finance and the blockchain ecosystem.





