Google has dramatically shortened its preparedness timeline for the moment quantum computers could break widely used public-key cryptography, setting a 2029 target for readiness. The move emphasizes a rapid shift toward post-quantum cryptography (PQC) to replace or augment RSA and elliptic-curve schemes.
Public-key cryptography protects decades of sensitive data, from financial records to government communications. PQC algorithms are designed to resist attacks from quantum computers, and major standards bodies are guiding their adoption. Google says the industry should accelerate migration to PQC to minimize risk from a potential cryptographic breakthrough.
Historically, estimates for Q Day have varied widely since the 1990s as researchers learned more about quantum hardware requirements. Early forecasts imagined needing vast numbers of qubits with error correction; later projections suggested shorter timelines, though many predictions remained uncertain. Google’s 2029 target is intended to provide a clearer, more urgent horizon for the industry.
Google frames this as a leadership act—calling on peers to adopt PQC algorithms to harden encryption and digital signatures. By setting a concrete deadline, the company says it hopes to spur faster transitions across the technology sector, including cloud services and consumer-facing products.
As PQC standards continue to mature, many organizations are already experimenting with lattice-based and hash-based schemes. The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) is guiding the process, while companies push updates to authentication and encryption protocols to accommodate quantum-resistant methods.