The Algorand Foundation announced on March 18, 2026, that it is reducing its workforce by 25%, citing the uncertain global macro environment and the broader downturn in crypto markets as primary factors.
The non-profit organization, responsible for stewarding the Algorand Layer 1 blockchain, stated that the decision was made to achieve “a more sustainable alignment of Algorand Foundation resources with the protocol’s long-term business, technology, and ecosystem priorities.” The foundation has fewer than 200 employees, according to LinkedIn data.
The cuts follow a period of repositioning for Algorand, including the January 2026 announcement that it was moving its headquarters back to the United States from Singapore to align with a more favorable regulatory backdrop and closer engagement with institutional markets.
The foundation communicated the decision via a post on X, emphasizing that it was “not taken lightly” and came in response to external pressures affecting the entire crypto sector. The statement acknowledged the affected employees as “best-in-class contributors” and expressed support for them through the transition.
The reduction affects approximately 25% of the foundation’s staff. According to LinkedIn, the organization employs fewer than 200 people, suggesting the layoffs impact roughly 50 individuals. The foundation did not disclose specific departments affected but framed the move as part of broader resource realignment.
According to the Algorand Foundation’s latest financial and transparency report, the organization holds approximately $38 million in U.S. dollar-denominated investments and 1.1 million ALGO tokens in its treasury.
Algorand’s native token ALGO currently trades near $0.09, down approximately 5% on the day of the announcement and nearly 19% year-to-date. The token ranks 78th by market capitalization, with a total value of approximately $805.8 million. ALGO has traded nearly 98% below its 2019 all-time high of $3.56, and last traded above $1.00 in January 2022.
Despite the price decline, the Algorand network has shown operational resilience:
Transaction growth: Q4 2025 transaction volume increased 4.7% compared to Q3
Real-world assets (RWAs) : The network hosts approximately $83 million in real-world assets, according to RWA.xyz data, ranking 19th overall among blockchains by RWA value
Peak RWA: Q4 transparency reports indicated RWA values reached $109 million on the blockchain, representing a 2.9% increase
In January 2026, the foundation announced it was moving its headquarters back to the United States from Singapore, a shift tied to a more favorable regulatory backdrop and closer alignment with institutional markets. This move reflected the foundation’s emphasis on regulatory clarity, tokenization, payments infrastructure, and bringing traditional finance onchain.
Foundation messaging around 2026 has centered on several key areas:
Regulatory clarity and compliance
Tokenization initiatives
Payments infrastructure development
Traditional finance onramps
Tokenized financial product standards
Agentic commerce tools
Continued research into privacy and scaling
Prior to the layoff announcement, Algorand had been highlighting ecosystem growth, including increased staking participation, enhanced developer tooling, and tokenized asset initiatives. The roadmap updates have pointed to work on various technical improvements and ecosystem expansion efforts.
The Algorand Foundation joins a growing list of crypto organizations implementing workforce reductions amid challenging market conditions:
OP Labs: Announced approximately 20 employees were let go in March 2026, framed as an organizational pivot rather than financial pressure
PIP Labs (Story Protocol) : Parted with 10% of its workforce in March 2026
Gemini: Laid off approximately 25% of its staff, citing efficiency gains from artificial intelligence, followed by subsequent executive departures
Block: Eliminated 4,000 employees in February 2026, though the impact on Bitcoin-focused initiatives remains unclear
Messari: Announced layoffs in early 2026 tied to advancements in AI
Tally: Governance protocol announced it is winding down operations
RTFKT (formerly Nike unit) : Being sunset as a project
While many layoffs stem from financial constraints, OP Labs specifically noted its reduction was not due to financial pressure but rather a strategic narrowing of focus. The Algorand Foundation’s announcement explicitly cited macro uncertainty and crypto market downturn as drivers.
Algorand was founded in 2017 by Silvio Micali, a Turing Award-winning MIT cryptographer who helped invent zero-knowledge proofs. The proof-of-stake network launched in 2019 and was designed to address the blockchain trilemma of security, scalability, and decentralization.
Despite the layoffs, the Algorand Foundation’s website currently maintains two job postings for roles in community management and business development, indicating continued strategic hiring in targeted areas.
“We remain fully focused on our mission of financial empowerment and the continued development and growth of the Algorand protocol, network, and ecosystem,” the foundation stated.
The Algorand Foundation reduced its workforce by 25%. With fewer than 200 employees according to LinkedIn data, the reduction affects approximately 50 individuals. The foundation did not disclose specific numbers or departments impacted.
The foundation cited two primary factors: the uncertain global macro environment and the broader downturn in crypto markets. The organization stated the decision was made to achieve more sustainable alignment of resources with the protocol’s long-term business, technology, and ecosystem priorities.
The Algorand network continues to show operational activity, with Q4 2025 transaction volume increasing 4.7% compared to Q3. The network hosts approximately $83 million in real-world assets, ranking 19th among blockchains by RWA value. However, the native ALGO token trades near $0.09, down approximately 98% from its 2019 all-time high of $3.56.