Litecoin’s Privacy Layer MWEB Hits Record 150K LTC Locked
Three years after activation, Litecoin’s MimbleWimble Extension Block (MWEB) is registering its strongest growth yet, underscoring rising demand for on-chain privacy that does not sacrifice speed or scalability.
Unveiled on 19 May 2022 in Litecoin Core 0.21.2, MWEB grafts an opt-in, parallel ledger onto every Litecoin block. The extension block is secured by the same proof-of-work miners, but shields transaction amounts using confidential transactions, native CoinJoin mixing, and stealth addresses. Because MimbleWimble prunes spent data, the design lightens blockchain storage while preserving fungibility.
Adoption figures illustrate the momentum. More than 90 % of miners and nodes now validate MWEB blocks, while users have locked about 150,000 LTC, roughly $12 million. into the private layer, an all-time high after months of steady inflows.

Analysts note a compounding effect: the bigger the pool of coins in MWEB, the harder it becomes to match deposits and withdrawals, which drives fresh interest from privacy-conscious holders.
Litecoin’s MWEB takes a balanced approach to privacy. Unlike Monero, which hides everything by default, and Zcash, which offers optional privacy but uses more data, MWEB keeps privacy optional and lightweight, making it practical for everyday use.
Wallet support for MWEB is growing. Cake Wallet added it in October 2024, enabling private transactions on mobile. Litecoin Core supports it from version 0.21.3, while Electrum LTC offers privacy features like coin control for desktop users without needing to run a full node.
Industry observers say the success of MWEB is reshaping perceptions of the veteran network once tagged as a testnet for Bitcoin. With low fees, fast confirmation and now an opt-in privacy layer, Litecoin is positioning itself as a practical medium of exchange rather than a mere staging ground for other chains’ innovations.
Further developments are already on the drawing board. LitVM , an EVM-compatible project, is building a smart-contract layer designed to link Litecoin to DeFi, NFTs, and Polygon’s AggLayer liquidity network, an expansion that could broaden the asset’s use case beyond payments.
For now, however, MWEB’s rapid uptake is the headline act, suggesting that privacy and scalability can coexist without compromising Litecoin’s open-network ethos.
If current trends hold, MWEB may prove pivotal not just for Litecoin but for the wider debate over how public-ledger systems balance transparency with the individual right to financial privacy.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
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