Coin Icon

Polkadot

(DOT)
$1.22 ▼ 0.76%
🏆 Rank #43
💰 Market Cap $2,053,996,943
📊 24h Volume $325,552,234
🔄 Circ. Supply 1,679,023,929 DOT
🏦 Total Supply 1,679,023,929 DOT
🛑 Max Supply 2,100,000,000 DOT
🚀 ATH $55
Buy on Bybit Official Partner
SafePal Wallet Official Partner

Community Pulse

What's your move for DOT today?

Voting is anonymous. One vote per 24h.

DOT Converter

$1.22
DOT
=
USD

NEWS

What is Polkadot (DOT)?

Polkadot is a sharded multicore network that allows different blockchains to interoperate under a single security umbrella. Unlike traditional blockchains, Polkadot’s “Relay Chain” doesn’t support smart contracts directly; instead, it provides security to “Parachains.” However, in March 2026, Polkadot is undergoing its most radical transformation since launch—Polkadot 2.0—which introduces a hard supply cap, a massive reduction in inflation, and a shift toward “Agile Coretime” (pay-as-you-go computing).

The 2026 landscape for Polkadot is defined by “The Great Economic Shift.” On March 12, 2026, the network will deploy the 2.1.0 runtime upgrade, which establishes a hard cap of 2.1 billion DOT on the total supply. This is followed on March 14 (Pi Day) by a 53.6% cut in annual issuance, effectively a “halving-style” event that shifts DOT from an inflationary model to one driven by scarcity and network consumption. This evolution is central to the Ethereum vs Solana debate, as Polkadot now offers the institutional predictability of Bitcoin with the scalability of sharded L2s. To see how Polkadot’s “Agile Coretime” compares to other data-availability solutions, check our Celestia guide. By Q1 2026, the network has also reached 13 million unique accounts, fueled by the launch of Smart Contracts directly on the Polkadot Hub.

The DOT Token: Scarcity and Staking 2.0

The DOT token is the utility and governance engine of the ecosystem. In March 2026, the staking mechanism is seeing major upgrades: validators are now required to have a 10,000 DOT minimum self-stake, while nominators will become non-slashable starting in April. To provide stable rewards for validators regardless of market volatility, the new Dynamic Allocation Pool (DAP) directs transaction fees and Coretime sales into a treasury that can pay out rewards in stablecoins. To ensure these cross-chain rewards are calculated fairly, Polkadot utilizes high-fidelity price feeds from the Pyth Network. This focus on decentralized, community-led economic policy is a mission shared with the World network, aiming to build a more resilient and equitable digital infrastructure.

Securing Your DOT and Agile Coretime in 2026

With the unbonding period for nominators being slashed from 28 days down to just 24–48 hours in April 2026, liquidity for DOT holders has never been higher. Choosing the right types of crypto wallets is essential for managing your “StakingOperator” proxies and Coretime vouchers. While the Polkadot App (launched in early 2026) offers the best native experience, institutional users are encouraged to use hardware-backed self-custody to manage their self-stake. In 2026, your wallet is also your ticket to the JAM (Join-Accumulate Machine) protocol, a future-facing upgrade that allows Polkadot to run any computation—not just blockchains—directly on its cores. Keeping your keys secure is vital for participating in OpenGov, where the community continues to vote on the final phases of the DAP rollout.

Faq

How does the unbonding period change in April 2026?
Following the 2.1.0 upgrade, the time it takes to “unstake” your DOT will be drastically reduced. For nominators, the previous 28-day wait is being replaced by a much more flexible 24 to 48-hour window, making DOT much more liquid.
What is “Agile Coretime”?
Agile Coretime is Polkadot 2.0’s new way of selling “space” on the network. Instead of winning a 2-year auction (the old “Slot” model), developers can now buy computing power as they need it—by the week, the month, or even by the individual block.
Are nominators still at risk of losing money (slashing)?
Starting in April 2026, a new governance rule makes nominators “non-slashable.” This means if a validator you support misbehaves, only the validator’s own 10,000 DOT self-stake is at risk, protecting the funds of the community members voting for them.
What is the JAM protocol?
JAM (Join-Accumulate Machine) is the next evolution of Polkadot. It allows the network to process any kind of data or code—not just blockchain transactions. It essentially turns Polkadot into a global, decentralized computer that can scale to millions of transactions per second.
Do I need to do anything with my DOT for the March 12 upgrade?
No. Your tokens will remain in your wallet or staking pool as they are. The upgrade is a “soft” transition for users; however, validators must ensure they meet the new 10,000 DOT self-stake requirement by late March to avoid being disabled.
Scroll to Top