
Pi Network has recently completed the first distribution of rewards for KYC validators. More than 1 million validators have completed a total of 526 million manual review tasks, helping verify the identities of about 18 million pioneers worldwide, and ultimately splitting a 26.5 million Pi reward pool. Each successful verification earns about 0.0504 Pi per individual reward, which is about 21 times the standard base mining reward.
The reward structure for this initiative is clearly designed, with an allocation split between the user contribution portion and the Foundation subsidy portion, ensuring that participants receive returns significantly higher than those from general mining:
Reward Calculation Benchmark: Each successful verification earns approximately 0.0504 Pi, which is about 21 times the standard base mining reward
Verification Task Threshold: At least 50 accurate verifications must be completed by March 5, 2026
On-Chain Distribution Requirement: Must have a fully functional Pi Network mainnet wallet; rewards are paid directly on-chain to the recipient account
Reward Pool Source: 16.5 million Pi from the user contribution mechanism, and 10 million Pi subsidized by the Pi Network Foundation
After eligible validators are confirmed by the system, the rewards will be transferred directly into their mainnet wallet, with no additional application or operation required.
Pi Network’s KYC verification uses a human-machine collaborative framework: AI tools assist with processing massive amounts of data, but the final decision for each identity verification—approval or rejection—is made by real users. This design ensures that verification outcomes have the accuracy and accountability of human decision-making, while also balancing the efficiency needed to handle large-scale tasks.
More than 1 million validators are distributed around the world. In collaboration, they completed 526 million tasks and ultimately verified the identities of about 18 million users. This scale exceeds that of most existing decentralized identity verification systems, and it also demonstrates the mobilizable potential of Pi Network’s user base as globally distributed human capital. Pi Network states that similar architectures may in the future extend to AI training data labeling or other digital labor scenarios requiring human judgment.
Pi Network says that after completing the first-round reward distribution, it plans to further optimize the metrics used to measure validator performance, which will affect the reward allocation ratios for future rounds. At present, new users can still join to become validators and participate in the subsequent reward distribution.
The timing of this KYC reward distribution closely aligns with the Protocol 21.2 upgrade on April 6—the latter establishes the technical foundation for decentralized exchange (DEX) and smart contract functionality. With both developments advancing in parallel, it shows that Pi Network is simultaneously strengthening its technical infrastructure and user-contribution incentive framework, accelerating its move toward an open mainnet phase.
Validators must complete at least 50 accurate KYC verification tasks by March 5, 2026, and must have a fully functional Pi Network mainnet wallet. For those who meet the requirements, rewards will be issued directly via on-chain payments, with no need for a separate application.
Each successful verification earns approximately 0.0504 Pi. This higher multiplier reflects that manual identity review tasks require more proactive judgment and time investment compared with passive mining, and it is also Pi Network’s differentiated incentive mechanism for real user contributions.
Pi Network states that new users can still join the validator ranks and participate in the reward distribution of subsequent rounds. At the same time, Pi Network plans to optimize how validator performance is measured, which may affect the standards for future reward distribution.