Solana Brings Subscription Billing Onchain With Native Recurring Payments And Spending Controls
Collecting monthly payments is one of the least glamorous parts of running a business, but it is also one of the most important.
Solana is now trying to make that process a built-in feature of its blockchain, giving developers a standard way to manage subscriptions, recurring payments and spending permissions without building their own billing systems from scratch.
The network has launched Solana Subscriptions and Allowances on mainnet, an open-source and audited programme designed to handle recurring and delegated payments directly onchain.
Security firms Cantina and Spearbit reviewed the code, and the infrastructure is already available for developers to integrate into applications across the Solana ecosystem.
A Shared Payment Layer For Developers
Recurring billing has long been a difficult area for blockchain developers.
Building subscription services, payroll systems or automated invoicing tools often required custom smart contracts, additional security reviews and off-chain infrastructure to manage payment schedules.
Solana's new framework aims to remove much of that complexity by offering a common payment standard that developers can integrate in days rather than weeks.
Instead of every project creating its own billing logic, applications can rely on a shared programme to manage permissions, payment limits and recurring transactions.
The approach is intended to support a wide range of use cases, from software subscriptions and contractor payments to automated stablecoin billing and AI-powered services.
Three Models Designed For Different Payment Needs
At the centre of the programme are three payment structures.
Allowances enable users to approve spending up to a predefined limit, with the option to set an expiry date.
Once authorised, approved parties can draw funds until the cap is reached or the authorisation expires.
Solana sees this as particularly useful for AI agents, allowing users to assign spending budgets while maintaining control over limits and duration.
Multiple delegates can also operate simultaneously under separate permissions.
Source: Solana
Recurring Delegations are designed for payments that repeat on a fixed schedule.
Users can authorise a delegate to collect funds up to a specified amount during each billing period, with spending limits automatically resetting when a new cycle begins.
This model is suited to payroll, contractor compensation and other recurring financial arrangements.
Subscription Plans allow merchants to publish fixed pricing tiers directly onchain.
Customers subscribe to a selected plan, and payments are automatically collected according to the agreed schedule.
Importantly, pricing terms remain locked for existing subscribers.
If a merchant wishes to introduce new pricing, it must create a separate plan rather than altering existing agreements.
Early Partners Already Putting It To Work
Several companies participated as design partners during development and have already begun integrating the programme into their services.
Among them is Helius, one of Solana's largest infrastructure providers, which plans to use Subscription Plans for onchain API billing.
Customers will be able to subscribe to service tiers and have payments processed automatically without relying on traditional payment processors.
Wallet infrastructure provider Dynamic is incorporating the system into its wallet experience, allowing users to approve recurring payments through a single interaction.
Meanwhile, stablecoin payment gateway Confirmo intends to use the framework to automate invoice collection for businesses and software providers accepting digital assets.
Other early participants include Majority, Mesh and Meow.
Can Blockchain Billing Compete With Traditional Systems
The launch highlights a broader effort to make blockchain payments work more like everyday business infrastructure rather than specialised crypto transactions.
Traditional providers such as Stripe and other billing platforms handle far more than payment collection.
They manage invoices, failed payments, customer disputes, refunds, reporting and compliance requirements.
Solana's new programme does not replace those services, but it does address a key challenge for onchain applications by standardising how spending permissions and recurring payments are handled.
The success of the model may depend heavily on user experience.
Subscription management is already a source of confusion for many consumers using bank cards.
Wallet-based permissions could create similar challenges if cancellation, spending limits and revocation processes are not clearly presented.
Developers integrating the system will still need to build customer-friendly interfaces, refund processes and support tools around the underlying payment infrastructure.
Part Of Solana's Growing Payments Strategy
The launch builds on Solana's wider push into payments and stablecoin settlement.
According to the network, its payment rails have been operating since 2020 and are used by companies including Visa, PayPal, Western Union and Fiserv.
Solana says it now processes more transactions than all other blockchains combined and handled more than $2 trillion in stablecoin transfers during a single quarter.
The network also points to sub-penny transaction fees and average block confirmation times of around 395 milliseconds as key advantages for payment-focused applications.
As stablecoin payments, automated commerce and AI-driven services continue to expand, Solana is betting that recurring billing and spending controls could become a core layer of blockchain-based business operations rather than another feature developers must build themselves.