Solana Mobile announced at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona that the Solana Mobile Stack is now available to third-party Android OEMs, allowing any hardware manufacturer to build hardware-secured crypto devices without building the infrastructure from scratch.
Until now, the Solana Mobile Stack powered exactly two devices: Saga and Seeker. Both were Solana’s own hardware. The technology, the Seed Vault, the dApp Store, the secure element integration, existed as an internal product rather than a platform anyone else could build on.
That changes with the MWC announcement. Any Android OEM can now license the SMS as a turnkey integration. The manufacturer keeps their existing hardware design, their Google Mobile Services certifications, their standard Android experience. The Solana stack sits alongside all of that as a modular opt-in layer, not a replacement for anything already there.
That modularity is the detail that makes this viable at scale. A hardware manufacturer doesn’t need to choose between building a standard Android phone and building a crypto phone. They can build both in one device, and the Solana layer doesn’t interfere with GMS compliance or security certifications.
The core of the stack is the Seed Vault, which keeps private keys inside the device’s Trusted Execution Environment and secure elements, isolated from the Android operating system entirely. The Android OS can’t read the keys. Apps running on Android can’t access them. The TEE handles signing operations without exposing the key material to the layer above.
That architecture matters because it solves the fundamental problem with software wallets: the operating system is the attack surface. On a standard Android device with a software wallet, a compromised OS means compromised keys. With hardware-level isolation, the OS compromise doesn’t reach the keys. The private key never leaves the secure element.
Chipset compatibility covers both MediaTek Dimensity and Qualcomm architectures, which together represent the majority of the Android OEM market. Solana partnered with MediaTek specifically to ensure production readiness on Dimensity chipsets before the announcement.
The revenue-sharing model is what makes this interesting from a manufacturer’s perspective. OEMs integrating the SMS participate in on-chain revenue through transaction fee sharing and staking commissions. A phone manufacturer that has traditionally made money on hardware margin and carrier deals now has a software revenue stream tied to how actively their users transact on Solana.
That’s a different business model. Not necessarily better for every manufacturer, but genuinely novel. The SKR token launching in early 2026 serves as the governance and incentive alignment layer across OEMs, developers, and users, creating a shared economic stake in the platform’s growth rather than a simple licensing arrangement.
The dApp Store integration gives OEMs a distribution platform with over 500 published applications on day one. A manufacturer doesn’t need to seed a marketplace. It already exists.
Solana Mobile’s pitch to OEMs isn’t theoretical. Over 200,000 Saga and Seeker devices have already processed more than $5 billion in on-chain transaction volume. The stack has been running in production on consumer hardware at meaningful scale before any OEM conversation began.
That matters for a risk-averse hardware manufacturer evaluating whether to stake their device lineup on unproven infrastructure. The answer is that it’s not unproven. It ran on 200,000 devices. Now it’s available to everyone else.
Whether major Android manufacturers take the integration seriously depends on whether they see crypto functionality as a differentiator their customers want. In markets like Turkey, where $200 billion in annual crypto volume reflects genuine monetary demand, the answer might be yes. In mature Western markets where crypto remains a niche interest for most consumers, the calculus is different.
The stack is available. Uptake is the open question.
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