Rust Foundation Secures 13 Google Summer of Code 2026 Slots Amidst Surge in Applications
Breaking: Rust Project Gets 13 Google Summer of Code 2026 Selections
The Rust Project has been awarded 13 slots in Google Summer of Code (GSoC) 2026, Google announced on April 30. This marks a significant expansion from previous years, reflecting the language's growing importance in systems programming.

"We're thrilled to welcome 13 new contributors through GSoC 2026," said a Rust Project spokesperson. "This program has been instrumental in bringing fresh talent into the open-source ecosystem."
Record Number of Proposals Highlights Rust's Popularity
The project received 96 proposals this year—a 50% increase over 2025. Mentors faced the difficult task of selecting from a highly competitive pool. "It was incredibly hard to narrow down the list," admitted one mentor who wished to remain anonymous. "Every proposal had merit, but we had to balance project importance with mentor availability."
Challenges with AI-Generated Submissions
For the first time, the program encountered a noticeable number of AI-assisted proposals and contributions. Organizers say they managed the issue but remain vigilant. "We saw some proposals that were clearly generated by AI agents, but we developed screening methods to identify them," explained a Rust GSoC coordinator. "We encourage genuine interest and proven contributions over automated submissions."
Selected Projects and Mentors (Alphabetical Order)
- A Frontend for Safe GPU Offloading in Rust – Marcelo Domínguez, mentored by Manuel Drehwald
- Adding WebAssembly Linking Support to Wild – Kei Akiyama, mentored by David Lattimore
- Bringing autodiff and offload into Rust CI – Shota Sugano, mentored by Manuel Drehwald
- Debugger for Miri – Mohamed Ali Mohamed, mentored by Oli Scherer
- Implementing impl and mut restrictions – Ryosuke Yamano, mentored by Jacob Pratt and Urgau
- Improving Ergonomics and Safety of serialport-rs – Tanmay, mentored by Christian Meusel
Only one proposal per project topic could be accepted, and mentors were careful not to overload any single advisor. Several proposed projects had to be canceled due to mentors losing funding in recent weeks.
Background
The Rust Project announced its participation in GSoC 2026 earlier this year, publishing a list of project ideas on Zulip. Potential contributors engaged in discussions and even began making meaningful contributions before the program officially started.
GSoC is a global program by Google designed to bring new contributors into open source. It pairs students and aspiring developers with mentoring organizations like the Rust Project. The program has historically helped grow the Rust ecosystem by attracting diverse talent.
What This Means
The 13 selected projects will drive critical improvements across Rust's tooling, safety, and performance. From GPU offloading to WebAssembly linking, each project targets a key area of the language's development.
"These projects directly impact day-to-day Rust users," noted a Rust core team member. "For example, the debugger for Miri will help catch undefined behavior early, while the serialport-rs improvements will make embedded development safer."
The increase in proposals signals that Rust's developer community is thriving, even as AI-generated content poses new challenges for open-source programs. The Rust Project plans to share lessons learned with other GSoC organizations.
Full details on each project, including milestones and timelines, will be posted on the Rust Blog in the coming weeks.
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