MoneyGram just announced they’re officially a Solana validator. This means they’re now staking SOL and helping keep the network secure by processing transaction blocks. They also hopped on the Solana Developer Platform, which is their new institutional-grade infrastructure that’s all set for artificial intelligence (AI) and Application Programming Interfaces (APIs).
This is MoneyGram’s biggest step into blockchain yet, building on their experience as validators for Tempo and Midnight Network.
From building on blockchain to running it
So far, MoneyGram has spent five years integrating crypto into its core payments platform. Now it’s going a step further. “Running a validator puts MoneyGram inside Solana’s consensus,” said Luke Tuttle, Chief Product and Technology Officer. “We stake Solana (SOL), process transaction blocks, and help secure the network at the protocol level. We help run the rails we move money on.”
The validator role is not symbolic; it gives MoneyGram direct influence over the network’s integrity and performance. As part of Solana Developer Platform, MoneyGram joins institutions like Mastercard in helping shape institutional blockchain infrastructure. The platform gives enterprises a single API-based gateway to stablecoin issuance, on/off-ramp orchestration, and token extensions.
Institutional validators signal maturation
MoneyGram becoming a validator is part of a bigger shift where big banks and financial firms are moving from just using blockchain to actually helping run the networks. Running a validator takes serious tech skills, commitment, and capital. By doing this, MoneyGram is showing they really trusts that Solana is ready for the big leagues.
“Players like MoneyGram, with global scale and experience serving customers across markets, are engaging with Solana as more payments activity moves onchain,” said Sheraz Shere, GM of Payments and Commerce at the Solana Foundation. The move also extends MoneyGram’s existing blockchain work. The company has already integrated MGUSD stablecoin across multiple chains and operates validator nodes on Tempo and Midnight Network.
What this means for payments
MoneyGram is bringing its 60 million customers and 500,000 locations onto the blockchain via the Solana Developer Platform. Basically, they’re linking up their usual payment setup with stablecoin tech, which makes sending money across borders happen in real time, no need to pre-fund accounts anymore.
Anthony Soohoo, MoneyGram’s CEO, framed it as foundational: “We believe the future of global money movement will be built on open, interoperable stablecoin rails that anyone, anywhere can access. Building that future requires compliance, regulatory clarity and operational scale. MoneyGram brings all three.
