Explore six DePIN projects shaping physical infrastructure in 2026, from AI compute and storage to energy grids, connectivity, and real-world revenue.Explore six DePIN projects shaping physical infrastructure in 2026, from AI compute and storage to energy grids, connectivity, and real-world revenue.

Top 6 DePIN Projects Transforming Physical Infrastructure in 2026

blockchain4 main

DePIN is moving from narrative to measurable infrastructure: nodes are scaling, but 2026 will reward demand, revenue, and reliability.

Industry research frames DePIN as a category that could reach $3.5 trillion by 2028, and there are already 13+ million devices contributing daily across DePIN networks. At the same time, you’ll see write-ups claiming explosive growth in sector revenue and project count. 

The bigger point is that DePIN is no longer just a story. These networks are already operating globally, and their services are increasingly relevant to real-world constraints, from balancing distributed energy and extending connectivity to providing compute capacity for AI workloads.

Below are six DePIN projects that are likely to shape physical infrastructure in 2026, selected for one simple reason: real deployment and tangible problems they’re solving right now.

Traditional carriers can pour millions into towers and still lose the indoor battle. Then there’s the last mile: once you add backhaul and maintenance, rural coverage often stops making business sense.

Uplink offers an alternative approach: a DePIN-based connectivity marketplace that turns existing Wi-Fi and local networks into usable infrastructure. Instead of telecoms and enterprises building coverage from scratch, they can offload traffic onto real, already-deployed capacity. 

For participants, the barrier to entry is low: there’s no need to purchase new hardware to get started. People can register compatible routers and locations and earn revenue for providing measurable, verifiable connectivity. Long term, any compatible Wi-Fi router could potentially become part of the network.

Uplink’s role is tracking contributions in a transparent dashboard and managing authentication, access control, payments, and quality of service across thousands of independent nodes.

What’s new is the scale. In its 2025 CEO Letter, Uplink says it surpassed 5M+ registered routers worldwide. Its dashboard also shows 15K verified routers that are live and actively contributing connectivity. In collaboration with a global Fortune 500 company, Uplink recorded a +23% increase in customers, an +82% rise in data transactions, and a +48% growth in connected devices over the year.

Uplink also raised $10M in April 2024, which helps explain how the project has been able to push from a growth narrative into a scaling phase.

In 2026, the focus shifts to the next level: how much of that network is validated for quality, activated by real traffic, and supported by paying customers.

Why Uplink could stand out in 2026 is simple: onboarding is easy. Uplink has highlighted OpenRoaming and says it was the first Wi-Fi DePIN project to earn both IDP and ADP certifications. Separately, it was also the first DePIN to launch on Avalanche.

OpenRoaming matters as well because, according to the Wireless Broadband Alliance, the federation has grown to 3M+ access points worldwide. In effect, it’s a massive distribution surface that reduces onboarding friction and accelerates scaling through standardized roaming.

So 2026 is about execution, not hype. The metrics are clear: verified coverage, verified usage, and enterprise/telecom clients. A token launch (TGE) should reinforce that shift from counting nodes to proving performance and revenue at scale.

2. Daylight: Energy Grid Coordinator

If you strip away the romance, the grid’s problem today isn’t simply “not enough energy.” Rooftop solar, home batteries, and EV chargers add capacity, but they also make the grid harder to predict and manage in real time. 

That’s where Daylight stands out because it’s building a practical network that connects home energy devices (solar, batteries, EV chargers) so utilities can use their flexibility to balance the grid in real time.  Homeowners share data and adjust usage when needed and get paid for the capacity and responsiveness they provide.

Importantly, Daylight is funded like a project aiming to scale beyond pilot talk. It raised a $9M Series A in July 2024 and later announced $75M in financing in October 2025, including $15M in equity and a $60M project development facility. 

Daylight argues the biggest bottleneck in residential solar isn’t the hardware: it’s the go-to-market machine. In its own materials, the company claims over 60% of residential solar costs come from marketing and customer acquisition, and it positions a subscription and financing model as a way to cut that friction.

On revenue, Daylight describes two primary streams: monthly subscription payments from homeowners and market-based compensation earned by dispatching stored battery energy back to the grid during peak demand events (with proceeds shared with participants). 

The company has also said it is currently funding subscriptions in Illinois and Massachusetts, a practical detail that signals it’s trying to make the model work in specific, regulated markets, not just in theory

3. DIMO: Vehicle Data for Owners

Valuable vehicle data remains locked in silos controlled by manufacturers. 

DIMO enables vehicle owners to connect cars via device or app, generating data that developers access through APIs to build mobility applications. To date, the platform has connected 425K+ vehicles. 

The real 2026 test is whether insurers and fleet operators will pay for the data and whether the platform can block fakes and deliver reliable, accurate telemetry at scale.

4. Filecoin: Decentralized Storage

Centralized storage runs on trust, which often turns into vendor lock-in. Filecoin flips that model by making storage verifiable: its Proof-of-Replication and Proof-of-Spacetime mechanisms are designed to prove that data is actually being stored over time, not just promised on paper. 

On the supply side, the network is frequently described as operating at a massive scale, often cited as over 1.5 exabytes of capacity with 3K+ storage providers.

In Q3 2025, Filecoin reported roughly 3.0 EiB of committed capacity (storage that providers have pledged and can cryptographically prove), and utilization rose to about 36%, up from roughly 32% the quarter before, a small but meaningful sign that demand is catching up. 

Another demand-side signal: by the end of Q3, Filecoin counted 2K onboarded datasets, including 925 very large datasets (over 1,000 TiB each).

In economics, the network recorded about $792K in fees for the quarter, and an important nuance is that most of these were penalty-related, underscoring how strict reliability requirements are at this scale. In other words, Filecoin is increasingly less about “how much capacity exists” and more about whether providers can deliver storage as a dependable service.

The next phase for Filecoin hinges on execution: fast, reliable retrieval, deeper enterprise integrations, and uptake for workloads that matter, not only long-term backups. 

5. io.net: Affordable AI GPUs

The AI boom is pushing demand for GPUs faster than traditional cloud supply can comfortably keep up, and that pressure shows up in both availability and cost. DePIN-style compute networks try to relieve that bottleneck by aggregating underused GPUs from many places: data centers, gaming rigs, and even former mining farms, then packaging them into a single marketplace developers can actually buy from.

That’s the pitch behind io.net. The project claims access to 30,000+ GPUs and markets itself as a lower-cost alternative to major cloud providers. One important nuance: while some third-party write-ups mention “up to 90% cheaper,” io.net’s own materials more commonly describe savings as “up to 70%” compared with providers like AWS, and that’s the safer number to repeat if you want to stay aligned with the project’s official messaging.

The real 2026 test is reliability. To compete with centralized clouds, io.net has to deliver GPU supply as a dependable service: meeting SLAs, keeping availability steady, satisfying compliance requirements for serious customers, and paying rewards only for verified compute actually delivered, not for idle hardware sitting on standby.

6. CureDAO: Health Data Infrastructure

Healthcare is the hardest sector for DePIN because it comes with strict regulation, high accountability, and zero tolerance for sloppy privacy. CureDAO is trying to turn health data into usable infrastructure: a unified health API and a plugin marketplace where incentives encourage clinics and patients to contribute data, while privacy is positioned as a built-in feature through cryptographic and operational safeguards.

CureDAO’s pitch leans on scale and measurable output. The project reports 10M+ donated data points from 10,000+ participants, largely focused on symptoms and factors that may influence them. The more important claim is what comes next: CureDAO says its citizen-science pipeline has produced roughly 90,000 studies, framing success not as “how many nodes exist” but as whether the data can generate real research work.

Still, in healthcare, raw volume isn’t enough. CureDAO’s success will depend on delivering verifiable research outcomes, maintaining privacy-by-design in practice (not just in messaging), meeting regulatory expectations, and, most critically, building partnerships with clinics and insurers who can validate that the data is medically useful.

What Comes Next for DePIN

Mass adoption has begun. Over the next 12–18 months, the focus shifts from node counts to business fundamentals: revenue, SLA performance, compliance, and seamless integration with legacy systems. The projects that win won’t be the loudest, but the ones solving real problems for real customers.  

The question isn’t whether DePIN will reshape infrastructure. It’s whether the leading networks can maintain quality, navigate regulation, and generate economics that hold up at scale.

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

House Judiciary Rejects Vote To Subpoena Banks CEOs For Epstein Case

House Judiciary Rejects Vote To Subpoena Banks CEOs For Epstein Case

The post House Judiciary Rejects Vote To Subpoena Banks CEOs For Epstein Case appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Topline House Judiciary Committee Republicans blocked a Democrat effort Wednesday to subpoena a group of major banks as part of a renewed investigation into late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein’s financial ties. Congressman Jim Jordan, R-OH, is the chairman of the committee. (Photo by Nathan Posner/Anadolu via Getty Images) Anadolu via Getty Images Key Facts A near party-line vote squashed the effort to vote on a subpoena, with Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., who is leading a separate effort to force the Justice Department to release more Epstein case materials, voting alongside Democrats. The vote, if successful, would have resulted in the issuing of subpoenas to JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon, Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan, Deutsche Bank CEO Christian Sewing and Bank of New York Mellon CEO Robin Vince. The subpoenas would have specifically looked into multiple reports that claimed the four banks flagged $1.5 billion in suspicious transactions linked to Epstein. The failed effort from Democrats followed an FBI oversight hearing in which agency director Kash Patel misleadingly claimed the FBI cannot release many of the files it has on Epstein. Get Forbes Breaking News Text Alerts: We’re launching text message alerts so you’ll always know the biggest stories shaping the day’s headlines. Text “Alerts” to (201) 335-0739 or sign up here. Crucial Quote Dimon, who attended a lunch with Senate Republicans before the vote, according to Politico, told reporters, “We regret any association with that man at all. And, of course, if it’s a legal requirement, we would conform to it. We have no issue with that.” Chief Critic “Republicans had the chance to subpoena the CEOs of JPMorgan, Bank of America, Deutsche Bank, and Bank of New York Mellon to expose Epstein’s money trail,” the House Judiciary Democrats said in a tweet. “Instead, they tried to bury…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 08:02
Polygon Tops RWA Rankings With $1.1B in Tokenized Assets

Polygon Tops RWA Rankings With $1.1B in Tokenized Assets

The post Polygon Tops RWA Rankings With $1.1B in Tokenized Assets appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Key Notes A new report from Dune and RWA.xyz highlights Polygon’s role in the growing RWA sector. Polygon PoS currently holds $1.13 billion in RWA Total Value Locked (TVL) across 269 assets. The network holds a 62% market share of tokenized global bonds, driven by European money market funds. The Polygon POL $0.25 24h volatility: 1.4% Market cap: $2.64 B Vol. 24h: $106.17 M network is securing a significant position in the rapidly growing tokenization space, now holding over $1.13 billion in total value locked (TVL) from Real World Assets (RWAs). This development comes as the network continues to evolve, recently deploying its major “Rio” upgrade on the Amoy testnet to enhance future scaling capabilities. This information comes from a new joint report on the state of the RWA market published on Sept. 17 by blockchain analytics firm Dune and data platform RWA.xyz. The focus on RWAs is intensifying across the industry, coinciding with events like the ongoing Real-World Asset Summit in New York. Sandeep Nailwal, CEO of the Polygon Foundation, highlighted the findings via a post on X, noting that the TVL is spread across 269 assets and 2,900 holders on the Polygon PoS chain. The Dune and https://t.co/W6WSFlHoQF report on RWA is out and it shows that RWA is happening on Polygon. Here are a few highlights: – Leading in Global Bonds: Polygon holds 62% share of tokenized global bonds (driven by Spiko’s euro MMF and Cashlink euro issues) – Spiko U.S.… — Sandeep | CEO, Polygon Foundation (※,※) (@sandeepnailwal) September 17, 2025 Key Trends From the 2025 RWA Report The joint publication, titled “RWA REPORT 2025,” offers a comprehensive look into the tokenized asset landscape, which it states has grown 224% since the start of 2024. The report identifies several key trends driving this expansion. According to…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 00:40
transcosmos helping Chinese lingerie brand LING LINGERIE’s full-fledged entry into Japan

transcosmos helping Chinese lingerie brand LING LINGERIE’s full-fledged entry into Japan

Executing strategies to help LING LINGERIE, a Chinese brand meeting Gen Z needs, boost awareness TOKYO, Jan. 23, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — transcosmos today announced
Share
AI Journal2026/01/23 19:30