TLDR
- MARA Foundation will fund open-source Bitcoin development and education.
- The nonprofit will support research on quantum-resistant Bitcoin tools.
- MARA plans work on Bitcoin’s long-term security budget and fee market.
- $100,000 will go to a nonprofit chosen by community vote at the Bitcoin Conference.
- The foundation will expand self-custody access and policy outreach.
MARA Holdings has launched the MARA Foundation, a nonprofit organization focused on supporting Bitcoin’s long-term network health, resilience, and adoption. The initiative was announced by MARA Holdings CEO Fred Thiel during the Bitcoin Conference in Las Vegas, where he described the foundation as part of the company’s broader commitment to the Bitcoin ecosystem.
The foundation will direct funding and resources toward open-source Bitcoin development, education, research, self-custody access, and policy engagement. MARA said the organization will operate with a focus on areas that affect the durability of the Bitcoin network, including miner incentives, transaction fees, and future technical risks.
Today at @TheBitcoinConf, @MARA CEO @fgthiel announced the launch of MARA Foundation.
The MARA Foundation represents MARA’s strategic commitment to supporting the health of the Bitcoin network, outside of our responsibilities as miners alone.
We believe Bitcoin embodies the… pic.twitter.com/3HHWF6jPiT
— MARA Foundation (@MARAFoundation_) April 27, 2026
MARA Holdings is one of the largest publicly traded Bitcoin mining companies by hashpower and holds one of the largest corporate bitcoin treasuries. The launch of the foundation expands the company’s role beyond mining operations and bitcoin accumulation into nonprofit support for Bitcoin infrastructure and public education.
MARA Foundation Targets Bitcoin Resilience
The MARA Foundation said its work will center on preserving Bitcoin’s core properties as open, decentralized, and globally accessible money. The organization plans to support free and open-source software development across Bitcoin infrastructure, including tools related to scaling, mining, wallets, and user access.
Thiel said Bitcoin requires ongoing stewardship because decentralization distributes responsibility across users, developers, miners, companies, and other participants. The foundation’s mandate reflects that view by funding work that is not limited to MARA’s own business operations.
The nonprofit will also support multilingual educational programs designed to expand public understanding of Bitcoin. These efforts are expected to include technical training, resources for users, and outreach aimed at improving access to self-custodial tools.
Quantum Computing Research Becomes a Priority
One of the foundation’s stated priorities is research into quantum-resistant Bitcoin tools. MARA said quantum computing does not pose an immediate threat to Bitcoin, but early preparation is needed because protocol changes can take time to review, build, test, and adopt.
The foundation plans to support work on post-quantum wallets and related proposals, including BIP 360. The proposal was co-authored by Isabel Foxen Duke, a market strategist at MARA, and focuses on approaches that could help protect Bitcoin users from future cryptographic risks.
Concerns about quantum computing remain theoretical for Bitcoin, but some researchers have warned that sufficiently advanced machines could threaten elliptic curve cryptography. The risk is generally viewed as more relevant to addresses that have already exposed public keys, including reused addresses and older wallets.
By funding research before such risks become immediate, the MARA Foundation aims to support technical planning for future network protection. The organization’s position adds another voice to the debate over how Bitcoin should prepare for long-range security challenges.
Security Budget and Fee Market Receive Funding
The MARA Foundation will also focus on Bitcoin’s security budget, which refers to the combined value of block subsidies and transaction fees paid to miners. The current block subsidy continues to decline through Bitcoin’s programmed halving cycle and will eventually end, leaving transaction fees as miners’ primary revenue source.
MARA holdings said the foundation will support development of a healthy transaction fee market. The issue is closely tied to Bitcoin’s long-term security model because miners need enough revenue to continue dedicating computing power to the network.
The nonprofit’s work will include research and open-source funding related to mining, scaling, and transaction infrastructure. These areas may affect how users send payments, how blocks are filled, and how miners earn revenue over time.
As part of the foundation’s launch, MARA will commit $100,000 to one of three nonprofit organizations. The recipient will be selected through a community vote at the Bitcoin Conference, giving participants a role in deciding where the initial funding is directed.
The MARA Foundation will combine technical funding, education, and policy outreach under one program. Its stated goal is to support Bitcoin’s long-term use while helping address technical and economic questions facing the network.







