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Renting blockspace on Polkadot means paying in $DOT to reserve processing time on the network's shared validator set, called a core, either in a fixed monthly block or in single-block increme
Renting blockspace on Polkadot means paying in $DOT to reserve processing time on the network's shared validator set, called a core, either in a fixed monthly block or in single-block increments, instead of locking up tokens for years to win a permanent slot. This system is called Agile Coretime, and it replaced Polkadot's old parachain slot auctions in 2024. Projects like Astar, Hydration, and Acala are among those using it today.
Coretime is the name for the resource Polkadot sells. In Polkadot's architecture, a core is a unit of computing power that the Relay Chain, Polkadot's base layer, provides to validate blocks for a connected chain called a parachain. Think of a core as a processing slot. Not every parachain needs a full core running constantly, so coretime allows a parachain to rent a fraction of a core, such as one-tenth, or rent several cores if it needs more power.
Worth noting, Polkadot's old model was rigid. Under the original parachain slot auction system, a team had to win an auction and lock up large amounts of DOT for up to two years to secure a slot. That slot ran constantly, whether the chain was busy or nearly empty. Small teams were priced out, and budgets depended on DOT's market price at auction time, adding financial risk unrelated to the actual engineering work.
Agile Coretime gives developers two main ways to rent blockspace.
A parachain can also combine both approaches, using bulk coretime for its baseline needs and on-demand coretime to handle traffic spikes.
Polkadot's governance approved the switch to Agile Coretime because the auction model created a real barrier to entry. Winning a slot required locking up DOT for a fixed lease term, often with the help of a crowdloan, an arrangement where community members lent DOT to a project in exchange for that project's own tokens. This process worked, but it concentrated blockspace access among teams with enough capital and community backing to win an auction, regardless of whether they actually needed constant block production.
Agile Coretime, paired with a related upgrade called Asynchronous Backing, addresses these problems directly. Asynchronous Backing lets parachains produce blocks without waiting on the Relay Chain's own block cycle, which has cut block times toward six seconds for chains that support it.
Coretime isn't a theoretical concept. Multiple live parachains rent blockspace through this system for very different jobs.
Worth noting: Moonbeam, long one of Polkadot's most prominent parachains for Ethereum-compatible smart contracts, announced on July 3, 2026, that it is shutting down its Polkadot parachain entirely and migrating its GLMR token to Coinbase's Base network by the end of July 2026, repositioning itself around AI agent infrastructure. It is a clear example that renting coretime is not a permanent commitment, and projects can and do exit the model.
The Polkadot ecosystem was reported at around 65 active parachains in early 2026, though departures like Moonbeam's mean the current live count is likely somewhat lower than that as of this writing. Total DeFi value locked across Polkadot parachains stood at approximately $60 million as of early July, 2026, according to DefiLlama data, with the large majority, about $53.5 million, held on Hydration alone.
DOT is the token used to pay for coretime, whether in bulk or on demand, which ties part of its utility directly to how much blockspace developers are actually renting. In March 2026, Polkadot's governance enacted a hard supply cap of 2.1 billion DOT and cut annual token issuance by 53.6 percent, a change aimed at reducing long-term sell pressure. Separately, a January 2026 governance proposal called Dynamic Allocation Pool changed how coretime sales revenue, transaction fees, and validator slashes are handled, moving away from simply burning that value.
As of early July 2026, DOT trades around $0.89, having climbed roughly 12 percent over the prior week after the network approved two staking-related governance proposals, referenda 1909 and 1910.
Referendum 1909 builds on a 10,000 DOT minimum self-stake requirement for validators, adding self-stake rewards, 0 percent commission, and permissionless removal of under-bonded validators. Referendum 1910 completely removes nominator slashing risk and shortens the unbonding period from about 28 days to roughly 48 hours. DOT remains down sharply, more than 98 percent, from its November 2021 all-time high near $55, and analysts continue to describe network on-chain activity as thin even as price ticked up on governance news rather than usage growth.
Renting blockspace on Polkadot now works through Agile Coretime, a system where developers pay in DOT for either a 28-day bulk allocation or per-block on-demand access, instead of locking tokens into a multi-year auction win.
Parachains including Astar, Hydration, Acala, Centrifuge, and KILT currently rent coretime to run smart contracts, decentralized exchanges, asset tokenization, and identity services, while Moonbeam's July 2026 exit shows that coretime rental is a flexible, ongoing choice rather than a permanent lock-in.
The token's tokenomics were reshaped alongside this shift, with a hard supply cap, reduced issuance, and a new revenue allocation model tying DOT more directly to actual coretime demand.