Polygon is building a system called AggLayer to let separate blockchains share liquidity and users without traditional bridges. Instead of forcing developers to pick one chain, AggLayer lets many Polygon-linked chains stay independent while still feeling like one connected network. The project has been live since February 2024 and remains Polygon's main technical focus in 2026.
What Problem Is AggLayer Trying To Solve?
Blockchains don't talk to each other well. A token on one chain can't move to another without a bridge, and bridges have caused billions of dollars in hacks over the years. This fragmentation also splits liquidity and users across dozens of networks, making each one feel smaller than it is.
Polygon's answer is the Aggregation Layer, or AggLayer. It's a shared coordination system that connected chains plug into. Rather than merging chains into one, it lets each chain stay sovereign while proving to the others that its internal state is accurate and its funds are accounted for correctly.
How Does The Technology Actually Work?
AggLayer relies on two core pieces:
- The Unified Bridge (LxLy): a common bridge contract that lets connected chains exchange assets and messages using the same rules, instead of each chain running its own custom bridge.
- Pessimistic Proofs: a verification method that checks a chain isn't withdrawing more tokens than it actually holds, without requiring that chain to produce a full zero-knowledge validity proof.
This second piece lowers the barrier to joining. Earlier versions of AggLayer only accepted chains built with Polygon's Chain Development Kit (CDK) that generated full ZK proofs. Pessimistic Proofs let a wider range of chains, including non-CDK ones, connect while Polygon works toward full ZK verification for everyone.
Polygon's own developer documentation describes AggLayer as bundled by default with every chain built using Polygon CDK, while other chains, including non-EVM networks like Miden, can integrate separately, meaning the network is no longer limited to EVM-compatible chains alone.
Who Has Actually Connected So Far
Early participants give a sense of how this plays out in practice. X Layer, built by exchange OKX, connected using the CDK toolkit. Polygon zkEVM, Polygon's own rollup, was also among the first. More recently, projects graduating from the Agglayer Breakout Program, including Miden and Privado ID, have joined or are in the process of joining, with plans to share token supply with $POL stakers as an incentive for routing activity through AggLayer.
Where Does The $POL Token Fit In?
$POL, which replaced the MATIC token at a 1:1 ratio, began trading under its own identity in 2024 as part of the Polygon 2.0 upgrade. $POL is meant to work across every connected chain. It pays gas, secures Polygon PoS through staking, and is used for governance. The tokenomics include ongoing emissions of 2% annually over a decade, split between validator rewards and ecosystem funding, with no fixed maximum supply.
That emission model has drawn criticism. As of mid-July 2026, tracking platforms showed $POL trading around $0.083, with a market cap near $888 million.
Different data providers report different all-time highs for the token, largely because some carry over price history from before the MATIC-to-$POL rebrand and some don't; figures range from roughly $1.29 (tracked from March 2024, under the $POL ticker) to $2.91 (tracked from December 2021, under the MATIC ticker). Neither number should be treated as a single verified peak, since both come from third-party trackers rather than a primary source. Either way, $POL is trading well below its historical highs by any measure.
What's clearer is the underlying tension analysts keep raising: whether growing network usage will eventually show up in stronger gas and staking demand for $POL, or whether the token continues to trade separately from the activity happening on top of it.
Polygon has continued working toward higher throughput and better validator performance in 2026, as part of the broader "Gigagas" roadmap, which targets 100,000 transactions per second on Polygon PoS.
Some crypto-news coverage this year has referenced a validator-focused hard fork and separate changes to block gas limits and block times. However, the specific dates and technical parameters circulating across secondary sources could not be confirmed against Polygon's own official communications for this article, so readers should verify directly through Polygon's official blog or GitHub release notes before citing exact figures.
Conclusion
Polygon's AggLayer connects independent blockchains through a shared bridge and a proof system that verifies each chain's token accounting, letting assets and liquidity move between chains without a traditional bridge. $POL functions as the gas, staking, and governance token across this connected network. The system already includes chains like X Layer, Polygon zkEVM, Miden, and Privado ID, and Polygon continues to pursue higher throughput through its Gigagas roadmap.
FAQ
What is AggLayer in simple terms? AggLayer is a system that connects separate Polygon-linked blockchains through a shared bridge and proof mechanism, letting them exchange assets without a traditional bridge.
Is $POL the same as MATIC? Yes. $POL replaced MATIC at a 1:1 ratio starting in 2024 and now serves as gas, staking, and governance token across Polygon's connected chains.
Which chains are connected to AggLayer? Early connected chains include X Layer (built by OKX) and Polygon zkEVM, with newer additions like Miden and Privado ID joining through the Agglayer Breakout Program.
- Polygon Developer Docs: Agglayer: secure cross-chain bridge for heterogeneous blockchains
- Report by CryptoAdventure: Polygon Review 2026: $POL Migration, AggLayer, and the Scaling Thesis
- Report by Coin Bureau: Polygon Review: What Is Polygon & Is $POL Still Relevant in 2026? –
- Blog article by Polygon Labs: $POL Value Accrual Post #2: Introducing the Agglayer Breakout Program –
- Price chart by CoinMarketCap: $POL price chart