We introduced Protocol last June which organized our work around three strategic initiatives: Scale L1, Scale Blobs, and Improve UX. A lot has happened since then! In this post, we want to share what we accomplished last year, how our thinking has evolved, and where Protocol is headed in 2026.
TL;DR
Great progress with tracks last year as we scaled L1, scaled blobs for L2, and built a strong foundation for UX improvements.
Announcing three new tracks:
Scale (led by Ansgar, Marius, Raúl) focused on consensus, execution, and blob scaling.
Improve UX (led by Barnabé and Matt) doubling down on the work from last year.
Harden the L1 (led by Fredrik, Pari and Thomas) ensuring the core properties of Ethereum are preserved through it all.
A quick look back at 2025
2025 was one of Ethereum's most productive years at the protocol level. We shipped two major network upgrades and made meaningful progress on every front we set out to tackle.
Fusaka followed in December, bringing PeerDAS to mainnet. Validators now sample blob data rather than downloading it in full, significantly reducing bandwidth requirements and enabling an 8x increase in theoretical blob capacity. Two BPO (Blob Parameter Only) forks shipped alongside Fusaka, beginning the ramp from 6 blobs per block toward higher targets.
It was a strong year. But as we looked at the road ahead, it became clear that our track structure needed to evolve to match the needs of the Ethereum community.
An impactful 2026
When we launched Protocol, we organized around three initiatives that mapped closely to near-term deliverables: get the gas limit up, get PeerDAS shipped, and improve UX. That framing served us well through Pectra and Fusaka. Now that those milestones are behind us, we have the opportunity to think about how we organize our work at a slightly higher level.
Starting in 2026, Protocol's work is organized into three tracks:
Scale
Led by Ansgar Dietrichs, Marius van der Wijden, and Raúl Kripalani
The Scale track brings together what was previously split across Scale L1 and Scale Blobs into a single, unified effort. This reflects a practical reality: the work of increasing L1 execution capacity and expanding data availability throughput is deeply intertwined. Gas limit increases depend on execution engine performance. Blob scaling depends on networking and consensus changes that touch the same client code. Coordinating these efforts under one roof makes us faster and reduces the surface area for a more holistic view.
Delivering the scaling components of Glamsterdam, including ePBS (EIP-7732), repricings, and further blob parameter increases
Advancing the zkEVM attester client from prototype toward production readiness
State scaling involving repricing and history expiry in the short term, and a move to binary trees and statelessness in the long term
Improve UX
Led by Barnabé Monnot and Matt Garnett
The Improve UX track carries forward much of the initiative from last year, with a sharper focus on two areas that we believe are highest-leverage for Ethereum's usability in 2026: native account abstraction and interoperability.
On account abstraction, EIP-7702 was an important step, but the end state is smart contract wallets as the default without bundlers, relayers, or extra gas overhead. Proposals like EIP-7701 and the more recent EIP-8141 (Frame Transactions) are pushing toward embedding smart account logic directly into the protocol. This work also intersects with post-quantum readiness, since native AA provides a natural migration path away from ECDSA-based authentication. Complementary to this are a number of proposals in the works that could make it much more gas-efficient to verify quantum-resistant signatures in the EVM.
On interoperability, we're building on the foundation laid by the Open Intents Framework. The goal remains seamless, trust-minimized cross-L2 interactions and we're getting closer day by day. Continued progress on faster L1 confirmations and shorter L2 settlement times directly supports this.
Harden the L1
Led by Fredrik Svantes, Parithosh Jayanthi, and Thomas Thiery
Harden the L1 is a new track, and it reflects something we think deserves dedicated focus: making sure that as Ethereum scales and evolves, it retains the properties that make it valuable in the first place.
This covers several areas:
Security: Fredrik continues to lead the Trillion Dollar Security Initiative and is driving security hardening including post-quantum readiness, and execution-layer safeguards like post-execution transaction assertions and trustless RPCs.
Censorship resistance: Thomas leads the track's protocol resilience research, spanning FOCIL (EIP-7805) and its extensions: censorship resistance for blobs, statelessness (VOPS), and the development of measurable censorship resistance metrics across the ecosystem.
Network resilience and testing: Parithosh's work on devnets, testnets, and client interop testing has been essential to every upgrade we've shipped. As we move toward an accelerated fork cadence, the infrastructure for safely validating and deploying changes becomes even more critical.
Looking ahead
Glamsterdam is the next major network upgrade, targeted for the first half of 2026, with Hegotá planned to follow later in the year. The ambition is clear with parallel execution, significantly higher gas limits, enshrined PBS, continued blob scaling, and progress on censorship resistance, native account abstraction, and post-quantum security.
We'll continue publishing track-level updates as we did last year; expect more information soon. If you want to follow along or get involved, protocol.ethereum.foundation is the best starting point.