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Cardano (ADA): The Complete Intelligence Brief
Cardano explained. How Ouroboros Proof of Stake works, the EUTXO model, Plutus smart contracts, and why ADA takes a peer-reviewed approach to blockchain development.
Updated April 22, 2026· CRYPTINT.IO Intelligence
Key Takeaways
- +Cardano (ADA) is a Layer 1 blockchain founded by Charles Hoskinson in 2017 and developed through a research-led, peer-reviewed methodology.
- +Cardano uses Ouroboros Proof of Stake, the first PoS protocol to undergo formal academic peer review before deployment.
- +Cardano uses the Extended UTXO (EUTXO) model for transactions, more similar to Bitcoin than Ethereum's account model.
- +Smart contracts on Cardano are written in Plutus, a Haskell-based language emphasizing formal verification and correctness over developer convenience.
- +ADA is named after Ada Lovelace. The maximum supply is 45 billion ADA, with ~35 billion currently circulating as of 2026.
Quick Facts
Cardano at a glance
| Attribute | Value |
|---|---|
| Ticker | ADA |
| Token type | Native L1 asset |
| Consensus | Ouroboros Proof of Stake |
| Mainnet launched | September 29, 2017 (Byron era) |
| Founder | Charles Hoskinson (IOG / Input Output Global) |
| Governing entities | IOG, Cardano Foundation, Emurgo |
| Block time | ~20 seconds (1 slot = 1 second; blocks at variable slots) |
| Typical fee | ~0.17 ADA (fraction of a cent to a few cents) |
| Circulating supply (Apr 2026) | ~35.5 billion ADA |
| Max supply | 45,000,000,000 ADA (hard cap) |
| Staking ratio | ~60-70% of circulating supply |
| Transaction model | Extended UTXO (EUTXO) |
| Smart contract language | Plutus (Haskell-based) |
| Primary explorer | cardanoscan.io |
| Alternative explorer | explorer.cardano.org |
| Binance-peg ADA (BNB Chain) | 0x3EE2200Efb3400fAbB9AacF31297cBdD1d435D47 |
| Official site | cardano.org |
What Is Cardano?
Cardano is a Layer 1 blockchain designed from the ground up around academic rigor. Every major protocol change is preceded by formal peer-reviewed research. Every smart contract language choice emphasizes provable correctness. The development philosophy is deliberately slow, methodical, and conservative.
This has made Cardano divisive. Supporters view it as the most serious engineering effort in crypto. Critics view it as an over-engineered project that took years to ship features other chains had at launch. Both perspectives capture part of the reality.
ADA is Cardano's native asset, used for transaction fees, staking, and governance. The project is named after Gerolamo Cardano (the Italian mathematician), and ADA is named after Ada Lovelace (the computer science pioneer). This classical naming reflects Cardano's academic orientation.
The Origin Story
Charles Hoskinson and the Ethereum Split
Charles Hoskinson was one of the eight original co-founders of Ethereum. He left in 2014 after a disagreement over Ethereum's organizational structure. Hoskinson wanted a for-profit company; Vitalik Buterin and others preferred a non-profit foundation. Hoskinson was voted out.
In 2015, Hoskinson co-founded Input Output Global (IOG, originally IOHK) with Jeremy Wood. IOG became the primary development organization behind Cardano.
The Three-Organization Structure
Cardano is governed by three separate entities:
- IOG (Input Output Global): builds the technology
- Cardano Foundation: standards, education, adoption, governance
- Emurgo: commercial applications, enterprise integration
This tripartite structure was designed to decentralize decision-making and prevent single-entity capture. In practice, IOG drives most technical direction, but the separation has held meaningfully across a decade of development.
The ICO
Cardano raised approximately $62 million in a 2015-2017 ICO, primarily targeting Japanese investors. This Japanese retail base remained a notable characteristic of Cardano's holder distribution for years.
The Five Eras
Cardano's development roadmap is organized into five named eras, each focused on a specific capability:
- Byron (2017). Foundation, ADA transfers, initial network
- Shelley (2020). Decentralization via staking pools
- Goguen (2021). Smart contracts via Plutus
- Basho (2022+). Scalability (Hydra, sidechains)
- Voltaire (2024+). On-chain governance
This sequential approach is unusual. Most blockchains launch with a rough feature set and iterate; Cardano explicitly released major capabilities years apart after extensive testing.
How Cardano Works
Ouroboros Proof of Stake
Cardano uses Ouroboros, the first Proof of Stake protocol to be formally peer-reviewed and mathematically proven secure.[1]
Key properties:
- Time is divided into epochs (~5 days) containing slots (1 second each)
- Each slot can produce one block; not every slot has a block (empty slots exist)
- Slot leaders are selected pseudo-randomly, weighted by stake
- Stakers delegate to stake pools run by operators
A non-PoS holder can still earn rewards by delegating to a pool. Delegation doesn't lock funds. ADA remains liquid and transferable while earning.
The EUTXO Model
Unlike Ethereum's account-based model (where the chain tracks balances per address), Cardano uses an Extended UTXO model (EUTXO). Every transaction consumes unspent outputs and creates new ones, similar to Bitcoin. The "extended" part adds smart contract data to UTXOs.
Tradeoffs vs the account model:
- EUTXO enables predictable fees (computed before submission)
- EUTXO makes certain DeFi patterns harder (AMMs, order books)
- EUTXO allows parallel transaction validation more naturally
- EUTXO is less familiar to Ethereum-trained developers
This architectural choice has been a major source of both praise and criticism.
Plutus Smart Contracts
Cardano's smart contract language is Plutus, based on Haskell. Plutus emphasizes formal verification, the ability to mathematically prove properties of a contract before deployment. This makes Plutus contracts theoretically more secure but considerably harder to write than Solidity.
The learning curve has limited developer adoption. Cardano's DeFi ecosystem is smaller than equivalent chains like Ethereum or Solana, partly because the barrier to entry for developers is higher.
Tokenomics
Supply and Issuance
- Max supply: 45 billion ADA
- Circulating supply (Apr 2026): ~35.5 billion ADA
- Initial distribution: ~31 billion from ICO and genesis; ~14 billion for staking rewards and treasury
New ADA is issued via staking rewards and treasury funding. The issuance rate decreases over time as the remaining supply is drawn down. This produces a predictable disinflationary schedule.
The Treasury
A portion of transaction fees and monetary expansion flows into the Cardano Treasury, used to fund development proposals. Project Catalyst, Cardano's on-chain grant program, has distributed hundreds of millions of ADA to community projects over multiple funding rounds.
Staking Ratio
Roughly 60-70% of circulating ADA is actively staked. This is one of the highest staking ratios among major PoS chains. The high rate reflects the ease of delegation (no lockup, no minimum) and the cultural alignment of Cardano's community around long-term holding. Proof of Stake mechanics are explained in our Proof of Stake guide.
The Ecosystem
DeFi
Cardano DeFi is smaller than Ethereum or Solana but has grown steadily. Notable protocols include Minswap (DEX), Liqwid (lending), Indigo (synthetic assets), and Djed (algorithmic stablecoin). Total DeFi TVL reached multiple billions at peaks.
NFTs
Cardano NFTs are "native" in a meaningful way: they exist as first-class assets on the ledger, not as smart contract tokens. This is a technical advantage (lower cost, better UX) and has produced a respectable NFT ecosystem.
Hydra and Scalability
Hydra is Cardano's Layer 2 scaling approach. A network of state channels that can handle high-volume transactions off-chain while settling to Cardano L1. Hydra development has been slow, and its commercial adoption remains limited as of 2026.
Midnight
Midnight is a Cardano sidechain focused on data protection and privacy-preserving smart contracts. It uses Cardano for consensus security but adds zero-knowledge features.
Price History
ADA Major Price Milestones
| Date | Event | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Oct 2017 | Exchange listing | $0.025 |
| Jan 2018 | First cycle peak | $1.33 |
| Mar 2020 | COVID crash bottom | $0.025 |
| Sep 2021 | All-time high (Alonzo era) | $3.10 |
| Jun 2022 | Bear market bottom | $0.40 |
| Nov 2024 | Post-election rally | $1.10 |
| Dec 2024 | Recent cycle peak | $1.32 |
| Apr 2026 | Current (as of this brief) | ~$0.55 |
Cardano Today
ETF Applications
ADA ETF applications have been filed with the SEC. As of April 2026, no Cardano spot ETF has been approved. Approval would broaden institutional access and validate ADA alongside Bitcoin and Ethereum as institutional-grade crypto assets.
Governance Transition
The Voltaire era introduced on-chain governance via the Constitutional Committee, SPOs (Stake Pool Operators), and DReps (Delegate Representatives). ADA holders now vote directly on protocol upgrades, treasury allocations, and constitutional changes. This transition from IOG-led development to community-led governance is still maturing.
Criticism
Cardano's pace of development remains a common criticism. While competitors shipped smart contracts, DeFi, and scaling solutions, Cardano often arrived years later with more academic rigor but less ecosystem momentum. Whether that tradeoff was worth it depends on one's view of long-term blockchain security versus short-term competitive position.
Why Cardano Matters
Cardano matters because it represents a different hypothesis about how crypto infrastructure should be built: slowly, methodically, with formal verification at the core. No other top-15 crypto project has committed as thoroughly to peer-reviewed research as a development methodology.
For traders, ADA has a large, loyal, long-term holder base that stakes heavily and trades less than other alt-L1 communities. This structurally lower velocity produces different price dynamics than more speculative assets. ADA tends to lag in early bull markets and catch up in later phases.
The risks are competitive (faster chains have captured developer mindshare), narrative (Cardano's "takes too long" reputation is now entrenched in crypto culture), and technical (whether EUTXO can compete with account-model efficiency in DeFi remains unresolved). The opportunity is in the reverse of those: if Cardano's slower approach produces genuinely more secure smart contracts and durable infrastructure, it wins on a longer timescale than most cycles measure.
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Intelligence
Fundamentals
Proof of Stake Explained
How Cardano's Ouroboros protocol differs from other PoS designs and why academic peer review shaped its architecture.
On-Chain
Blockchain Explorers
How to use Cardanoscan and pool.pm to verify ADA transactions, stake pools, and native assets.
News
SEC Crypto Enforcement
Regulatory context around ADA, including ETF applications and the SEC's prior characterization of ADA as a security.
On-Chain
Active Addresses
Why daily active address counts matter for Cardano network health and the debate around ADA's on-chain usage.
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