The Ethereum blockchain has officially raised its block gas limit to a record 60 million gas units, a major milestone that effectively doubles the network’s per-block capacity compared to just a year ago.
After steady community pressure and validator signaling throughout 2025, Ethereum has now adopted a 60 M block gas limit, a significant jump from the 30 M–45 M range seen previously. This demonstrates strong consensus across the network that the chain is ready to support much higher transaction throughput per block.
According to an official communication tied to the upgrade, this increase reflects the network’s technical maturity and readiness to handle heavier demand, including more smart-contract activity, DeFi operations, and Layer-2 rollups.
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin responded to the milestone by outlining a cautious but forward-looking roadmap. He warned that while the gas limit may continue to rise, potentially up to 5× the current level, the growth will be “targeted and less uniform.”
Under this plan, certain expensive or inefficient operations, such as complex smart-contract calls, heavy storage writes (SSTORE), pre-compile calls, large-scale arithmetic, and extensive calldata usage, will see their gas costs adjusted upwards.
The goal? To allow more transactions per block without bloating the network, slowing down block propagation, or making it excessively costly for validators to run nodes.
While the upgrade boosts capacity, experts warn that raising gas limits indiscriminately can lead to network centralization, as high requirements may force smaller validators offline.
Moreover, block propagation could slow, increasing the risk of stale (orphaned) blocks. That’s why the planned growth is cautious, pairing gas-limit increases with higher costs for heavy operations.
Finally, the increased capacity may not immediately translate into lower gas fees for end-users; if demand surges, fee pressure could remain high.
Q: What is a “gas limit” on Ethereum?
A: On Ethereum, every transaction or smart-contract operation consumes “gas,” which measures computational resources (storage, execution, etc.). The “block gas limit” sets the total gas that all transactions in a single block can consume, so a higher limit allows more or heavier transactions per block.
Q: Why did Ethereum raise its gas limit to 60 million?
A: The increase reflects growing demand for transactions and smart-contract activity. By raising the limit, Ethereum’s developers and validators enable greater throughput per block, improving scalability and accommodating increased usage across DeFi, NFTs, and Layer-2 rollups.
Q: Will this make Ethereum transactions cheaper?
A: Not necessarily. While higher capacity can ease congestion, transaction fees also depend on demand. If usage spikes, fees may remain high, but over time, increased block capacity and more efficient gas pricing may stabilize costs.
Q: What does Vitalik Buterin mean by “targeted and less uniform” growth?
A: Instead of uniformly increasing capacity for all operations, Ethereum plans to increase gas limits while raising gas costs for resource-intensive or inefficient operations. This ensures the network scales responsibly without encouraging wasteful or heavy computational behavior.
Q: Could raising the gas limit pose risks to network decentralization?
A: Yes. Larger blocks mean more computational and storage load, which might make it harder for smaller validators to run nodes. To mitigate this, Ethereum’s roadmap emphasizes balanced growth and smarter gas-price adjustments.
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