Why Bitcoin cannot run directly on Solana
Bitcoin and Solana are separate blockchains with different execution models. Native BTC only settles on the Bitcoin network, while Solana applications execute through Solana programs and SPL tokens. Because there is no native cross-chain interoperability between these networks, Bitcoin value must be represented in tokenized form to participate in Solana swaps, lending, and liquidity pools.
What is wrapped Bitcoin
Wrapped Bitcoin is a token representation of BTC on a non-Bitcoin chain. The common pattern is lock-and-mint: BTC is held in reserves, and an equivalent token is issued on another network. The quality of that representation depends on the trust model, reserve transparency, and redemption process.
Why there are multiple versions of Bitcoin on Solana
Different projects solve the same problem with different assumptions. Some prioritize institutional custody, some focus on trust-minimized cryptographic models, and others add yield features. As a result, multiple BTC tokens coexist on Solana, each with its own risk and usability profile.
cbBTC (Coinbase Wrapped BTC)
cbBTC is issued by Coinbase and uses a centralized issuer model. Coinbase states cbBTC is backed 1:1 by BTC reserves and publishes a dedicated proof-of-reserves page. This model is attractive for users who prefer known issuers and clear disclosure pages, but it still carries issuer and custody dependency risk.
WBTC (Wrapped Bitcoin)
WBTC is the longest-running wrapped BTC format in the broader crypto market and is historically associated with large cross-chain liquidity. It also uses a custodial framework and is widely integrated in DeFi systems, which can help route quality where pool depth is strong.
tBTC (Threshold Bitcoin)
tBTC is designed as a decentralized alternative that reduces single-custodian dependency. Instead of one centralized custodian, it relies on distributed operator systems and threshold cryptography. This model aims to improve trust minimization, with different operational tradeoffs.
zBTC (Zeus Network)
zBTC is designed for permissionless BTC bridging into Solana. It follows a lock-and-mint architecture intended to minimize centralized gatekeeping. This can be attractive for users who prioritize open access, while still requiring careful evaluation of bridge architecture risk.
LBTC (Lombard Bitcoin)
LBTC extends tokenized BTC with yield-oriented design. Instead of only representing BTC, it also targets BTC-linked yield mechanisms in DeFi contexts. That introduces additional strategy and protocol dependencies compared with simple wrapped representations.
Comparison of Bitcoin representations on Solana
| Token | Model | Core tradeoff |
|---|---|---|
| cbBTC | Centralized issuer custody | Strong brand and disclosures, with issuer dependency |
| WBTC | Custodial standard | Large historical liquidity, custodial trust assumptions |
| tBTC | Decentralized custody model | Lower single-entity dependency, higher protocol complexity |
| zBTC | Permissionless bridge | Open access, bridge architecture risk |
| LBTC | Yield-bearing BTC | Additional yield path, additional strategy risk |
Why Bitcoin liquidity matters for Solana
Bitcoin is still the largest crypto asset by market capitalization. When BTC-linked liquidity becomes available in Solana DeFi, it can increase route depth, improve swap capacity, and expand collateral and lending use cases. That is why wrapped BTC infrastructure has become a key part of Solana market growth.
Related guides
- /tokens/cbbtc
- /tokens/sol
- /tokens/usdc
- /guides/what-is-liquidity-pool
- /guides/what-is-slippage