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Ethereum shifts to a multilayer Web3 framework

Ethereum is moving through a broad structural overhaul aimed at reinforcing its role as a core web3 infrastructure, with recent updates pointing to a transition from a single-layer system to a multi-layer framework integrating execution, validation, coordination, and resource distribution.

The Ethereum Foundation has already aligned its operations with this shift, cutting 19 roles, narrowing focus to Layer 1 development, and reducing its annual funding ratio from about 15% to 5% to preserve reserves. At the same time, it replaced its open grant model with a targeted ecosystem support program focused on cryptography, privacy, and core infrastructure.

Ethereum shifts toward multi-layer architecture

Pectra upgrade expands capacity and validator flexibility

The latest Pectra upgrade introduced key technical changes designed to improve scalability and validator efficiency. EIP-7251 raised the validator balance cap to 2,048 ETH, allowing larger participants to consolidate operations, while EIP-7691 doubled the number of blobs per block from 3 to 6, increasing data availability for Layer 2 networks.

Blob usage has continued to rise alongside Layer 2 adoption, with subsequent proposals such as EIP-7594 and EIP-7892 improving validation efficiency by enabling partial data sampling. This approach reduces bandwidth requirements significantly, while total blob capacity per block has increased to 15.

Governance and leadership evolve

Leadership changes in early 2026 marked another step toward decentralization. Stańczak stepped down as co-executive director, with Aue and Wang taking over executive roles, while Miyaguchi remained president, focusing on partnerships and external engagement.

These adjustments reflect a gradual redistribution of decision-making authority within Ethereum’s internal governance, mirroring its broader push toward decentralized coordination.

Proof-of-stake refinements target efficiency

Ethereum’s proof-of-stake system has also been updated to address validator concentration and operational complexity. While the 32 ETH minimum stake remains unchanged, the higher cap allows consolidation across fewer nodes, reducing coordination overhead.

EIP-7002 further improved flexibility by enabling execution-layer-triggered withdrawals, making staking liquidity easier to manage.

Layer 2 growth drives coordination efforts

As Layer 2 networks continue to handle the majority of transactions, Ethereum is working to reduce fragmentation across its ecosystem. Developers introduced the Ethereum Economic Zone (EEZ) to support interoperability between rollups and the mainnet.

In parallel, EIP-8079 outlines a native rollup model that leverages Ethereum’s own state functions to streamline verification and eliminate redundant proof systems.

Transaction ordering and scalability improvements

Ethereum is also addressing transaction ordering through EIP-7732, known as enshrined proposer-builder separation. By embedding this mechanism directly into the protocol, the network reduces reliance on external relays while maintaining a separation between block construction and validation.

This design allows for higher data throughput by extending broadcast timing and splitting confirmation into two stages, improving stability under heavier loads.

Competition pressures roadmap execution

Rival Layer 1 networks such as Solana and Sui continue to push high-throughput, low-cost models using parallel execution and specialized consensus systems, increasing pressure on Ethereum’s roadmap.

In response, Ethereum is advancing single slot finality, which aims to reduce final confirmation time to around 12–13 seconds. Until then, a fast confirmation rule is expected to shorten settlement times to roughly one slot, though some risk remains during volatile conditions.

Gradual path toward a unified network

Ongoing upgrades across staking, scalability, governance, and interoperability indicate a steady move toward a unified economic and computational platform. Ethereum’s ability to maintain performance, decentralization, and coordination across its expanding architecture will likely determine how effectively it competes as the blockchain landscape evolves.


To understand these structural upgrades in depth, explore our detailed guide on the Ethereum Pectra upgrade and its trading implications.

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