On-chain gas futures proposal aims to make Ethereum transaction fees predictable for high-volume users and enterprises by locking in gas prices ahead of time.
- Vitalik Buterin proposes an on-chain gas futures market allowing users to pre-buy gas at fixed prices for later use.
- The design extends EIP-1559, offering price predictability for exchanges, rollups, and enterprises without directly lowering gas fees.
- Futures prices would signal expected demand for Ethereum blockspace, creating new economic inputs for scaling and resource allocation.
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has proposed a new on-chain gas futures market designed to address transaction fee unpredictability on the network, according to a recent announcement.
The proposal centers on allowing users to purchase a defined amount of gas at a fixed price for future use, rather than paying variable fees based on real-time network congestion. The system would enable users to lock in transaction costs in advance, according to the proposal details.
Under the proposed design, futures contracts would be traded directly on-chain, with prices reflecting market expectations of future network demand. When demand is anticipated to increase, futures prices would rise, and when demand is expected to decline, prices would fall, creating a market-driven indicator of upcoming network activity, the proposal states.
The structure builds on the foundation established by EIP-1559, which introduced Ethereum’s base fee mechanism. The futures market would extend that system rather than replace it, according to the proposal.
The mechanism aims to provide cost certainty for high-volume network users, including exchanges, rollups, wallets, and automation services. These entities often face operational disruptions from sudden gas fee spikes, according to industry observers.
For developers, the system would provide a stable environment for scheduling upgrades and managing deployments without exposure to fee surges, the proposal indicates. The predictability could also address barriers for enterprises integrating Ethereum into payments, verification, or data-processing workflows.
At the network level, the futures market would introduce economic signals for scaling decisions and resource allocation. Rising futures prices would indicate increasing demand for blockspace, while falling prices would signal lower demand, according to the proposal.
The proposal does not aim to reduce gas fees but rather to make them more predictable by converting variable costs into manageable, forward-looking expenses, Buterin stated. The change represents a shift in Ethereum’s economic framework, moving from short-term fee volatility to stable, advance pricing mechanisms.
The proposal has not yet been formally submitted as an Ethereum Improvement Proposal, and no timeline for implementation has been announced.

