As blockchains grow, they need ways to scale and handle more use cases. Two popular solutions are parachains and sidechains. Both run in parallel to a base blockchain and extend its capabilities, but they work differently.
Parachains are blockchains that connect to a central relay chain for security and coordination. The best-known example is Polkadot, where parachains plug into its relay chain for shared validation and seamless communication.
Think of parachains as branches of the same tree, all growing from one secure trunk.
Sidechains are independent blockchains that connect to a main chain via bridges. Unlike parachains, they maintain their own validators, consensus, and governance.
Sidechains are like separate highways linked by bridges, able to run at their own speed but still connected.
Aspect |
Parachain |
Sidechain |
Connection |
Linked to a relay chain (e.g. Polkadot) |
Linked by bridges to a main chain |
Security |
Shared validator set via relay chain |
Independent validator set |
Flexibility |
Bound by relay chain rules |
High flexibility & custom consensus |
Examples |
Moonbeam, Acala (Polkadot) |
Polygon PoS, Liquid (Bitcoin) |
Both parachains and sidechains aim to scale blockchains and enable specialization:
Neither approach is “better”, it depends on whether a project values collective security or the freedom to experiment.
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