How Solana Processes Transactions — And How to Make Them Faster
If you've ever sent a transaction on Solana and wondered why it landed instantly one time and struggled another, you're not alone. Solana is incredibly fast, but how your transaction enters the network matters just as much as what you're sending. In this article, we'll break down Solana transaction processing in plain English — no developer jargon — and explain why landing services like Lunar Lander and Astralane can dramatically improve speed and reliability. The Big Picture: How Solana Handles Transactions At a high level, Solana works like this: You submit a transaction The network decides which transactions get processed first A validator includes your transaction in a block The transaction is finalized on-chain The key detail most users don't see is step #2 — how Solana decides which transactions get priority when the network is busy. That decision is driven by something called Stake-Weighted Quality of Service (QoS) . Stake-Weighted QoS (Explained Like You're Not a Developer) Solana has a built-in traffic management system. Think of it like traffic control for a highway. A Simple Analogy Imagine a highway with two lanes: 🚗 Fast lane (priority access) 🚙 Regular lane (everyone else) Solana prioritizes transaction traffic based on stake, meaning traffic originating from or routed through high-stake validators is more likely to be processed during congestion. Why? Because validators that stake SOL are financially invested in keeping the network healthy. Giving them priority helps protect Solana from spam and overload. What This Means for You Transactions that enter Solana through stake-backed paths have a much higher chance of landing quickly Transactions that enter through generic or overloaded RPCs compete for a smaller slice of capacity During congestion, non-priority transactions are more likely to be delayed or dropped This is the core idea behind Solana's stake-weighted QoS system. Where Transactions Usually Go Wrong Most wallets and apps send transactions t