Decentralized wallet and AI developers are the latest focus of Tether’s expanding open-source funding efforts.
Blockchain platform Tether is putting fresh capital behind developers building independent crypto and AI tools. New grants will fund projects tied to wallets, payments, browser extensions, and on-device AI systems. Company executives say the goal is to support software that works without relying on centralized platforms or outside providers.
Tether Funds Developers Building Independent Payment Infrastructure
In a release, Tether announced the launch of a new grants initiative for developers building tools on its open technology stack. The funding will support developers building wallet tools, browser extensions, AI applications, and payment features.
According to the firm, payouts will be made in either Bitcoin or USDT. Each grant comes with a fixed payout for completing specific tasks instead of long-term funding commitments.
Current grants pay between $1,500 and $4,000, based on the type of work completed. Tether said the program focuses on software tools that can run independently without relying on centralized services or outside providers.
Build what matters. Get rewarded. ⚡️
Introducing https://t.co/QGTespct1t. We are providing the resources to scale your vision through community grants and technical bounties.
Whether you are building the next billion-user wallet with @WDK_tether, local-first AI with @QVAC,… pic.twitter.com/ddpkl9R30F
— Tether (@tether) May 11, 2026
Much of the initiative is tied to Tether’s on-device AI platform, QVAC. Instead of sending data to cloud servers, QVAC processes it directly on a user’s device. This keeps data local and reduces reliance on third-party systems.
Tether argues similar dependency problems still exist across crypto applications. Moving digital assets on-chain has become easier, yet building fully independent products remains difficult. Many developers still rely on custodians, exchanges, or outside APIs to support wallets, payments, and backend services.
New Funding Program Targets Decentralized Wallet Technology
Part of the grants program targets work on Tether’s Wallet Development Kit (WDK). The open-source toolkit lets developers embed self-custodial wallets directly into applications. Users can create and manage keys locally, sign transactions, and transfer funds without the need for custodial intermediaries.
WDK supports mobile, desktop, and embedded environments. Developers can integrate payments directly into software instead of routing transactions through external platforms. Local execution also makes the framework suitable for automated systems and machine-based applications.
Additional grants will support apps built on Tether’s stack, alongside research into decentralization, peer-to-peer networking, edge AI, and cryptography. Funding also covers tooling, integrations, and open standards tied to independent infrastructure.
Paolo Ardoino, CEO of Tether, said many developers still depend on centralized platforms and outside providers to run their products. He said Tether wants to back tools that work locally, manage value directly, and operate without intermediaries.
“We’re taking a different approach. If you can build something that runs locally, holds value directly, and doesn’t rely on external providers, we’ll fund it. That’s how you get real systems into the market.”
Ardoino said.
The program marks another expansion of Tether’s support for open-source and Bitcoin-focused development. The company previously awarded two consecutive $100,000 grants to the BTCPay Server Foundation and donated $250,000 to OpenSats.
Through its Plan B initiative with the City of Lugano, Tether has also funded student education grants and committed up to CHF 5 million for the program through 2030.


