Tether’s Tether developer grants program is now open for applications, offering payouts in USD₮ or Bitcoin with no overall cap. The company says the funding is meant to back local-first AI tools and self-custodial wallets that can run without relying on outside providers.
Rather than handing out open-ended support, Tether is tying each grant to a specific technical deliverable, fixed payout, and deadline. In practice, that turns the program into a build-to-earn model focused on shipping code, not pitching ideas.
The bet is straightforward: if wallets, AI, and payments can run locally, software may not need cloud platforms, custodians, or paywalled APIs. That matters because third-party dependencies often shape performance, privacy, and uptime across crypto apps and AI tools.
The Tether developer grants program has two unusual features for a corporate-backed initiative. First, Tether says there is no cap on total payouts. Second, the company will pay builders directly in USD₮ or Bitcoin.
Individual awards currently range from roughly $1,500 to $4,000, and developers receive payment when they complete well-scoped tasks. According to Tether, applicants can apply to active tasks right now.
The structure favors shipping code, including wallet infrastructure, browser extensions, and e-commerce integrations, rather than lengthy proposals. As a result, the program is built around execution and visible output.
At the center of the program is QVAC, an on-device AI platform that runs directly on local hardware. Instead of sending data to cloud servers for inference, QVAC is designed for low-latency, private, and offline-capable AI.
Tether is also directing part of the program toward its open-source Wallet Development Kit, or WDK. That toolkit lets developers embed self-custodial wallets directly into their applications, so keys, signing, and fund movement can stay inside the app on mobile, desktop, or embedded systems.
Beyond those two pillars, the program spans the stack:
Each grant maps to a defined task with a fixed payout and deadline, which keeps the scope tight and the work shippable.
Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino framed the initiative as a push for systems that work without centralized chokepoints. “If you can build something that runs locally, holds value directly, and doesn’t rely on external providers, we’ll fund it,” he said.
That pitch lines up with the program’s focus on local-first AI and self-custodial wallets. More importantly, it reflects a broader effort to reduce reliance on cloud AI and API-based finance.
In practice, local inference can cut latency and data exposure. Meanwhile, local wallets can reduce vendor lock-in and counterparty risk. For crypto developers, that combination could speed up product cycles and improve reliability, especially in regions where internet stability or service access is uneven.
Tether says the program builds on its earlier support for public goods in the Bitcoin and open-source ecosystem. The company previously awarded $100,000 grants to the BTCPay Server Foundation in consecutive years and donated $250,000 to OpenSats.
Tether also points to its Plan₿ initiative with the City of Lugano. The company says that effort includes more than 500 student education grants, annual pitch competitions, and a commitment of up to CHF 5 million toward the next phase through 2030.
Taken together, the Tether developer grants program positions the company as an ongoing funder of local-first AI and open payments infrastructure. For now, the key question is how quickly developers ship WDK-based apps and QVAC-powered tools, and whether the no-cap model scales as more tasks go live.
The Tether developer grants program is an open funding initiative from Tether that pays developers in USD₮ or Bitcoin for completing specific technical tasks. The grants are tied to fixed deliverables and deadlines.
Tether says the program will fund local-first AI, self-custodial wallets, wallet infrastructure, browser extensions, e-commerce integrations, research, documentation, tooling, and open standards.
No. Tether says there is no cap on total payouts in the program.
Individual awards currently range from roughly $1,500 to $4,000, depending on the task.

