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2026 Marks a Turning Point for Ethereum’s Core Architecture
The year 2026 is shaping up to be one of the most important in Ethereum’s history. For the first time, validators will begin verifying tiny zero-knowledge proofs instead of reexecuting every transaction in a block. This change immediately unlocks major scaling benefits for Ethereum’s layer 1 and puts the network on a clear path toward 10,000 transactions per second.
ZK Validation Proven on Consumer Hardware
Ethereum researcher Justin Drake demonstrated at EthProofs Day during Devconnect that validating ZK-proofs is already possible on an old laptop. This breakthrough shows that proof verification is lightweight enough for low-spec hardware, and around 10% of Ethereum validators are expected to adopt ZK validation before the end of the year.
A Change Comparable to the Ethereum Merge
This transition represents a complete overhaul of how Ethereum works at a fundamental level. Its scale is comparable to the 2022 Merge, when Ethereum successfully moved from proof-of-work to proof-of-stake. Instead of every validator reexecuting every transaction, validators will simply check whether a cryptographic proof confirming correct execution is valid.
Solving the Blockchain Trilemma Through ZK-Proofs
Validating a ZK-proof is so computationally inexpensive that it could theoretically be done on a smartphone or smartwatch. This allows Ethereum to scale throughput dramatically while preserving decentralization, as validators are no longer constrained by the weakest hardware in the network. Currently, Ethereum processes around 30 TPS, but validator hardware requirements are already close to gaming laptop levels.
Heavy Computation Moves to Builders and Provers
Under the new model, the most demanding computational work will be handled by block builders and ZK provers rather than validators. According to Besu protocol engineer Gary Schulte, this shift allows gas limits to increase without forcing solo stakers to upgrade hardware, as only a small subset of machines will need to handle intensive execution and proving.
Lean Execution Phase One Begins in 2026
Justin Drake expects Phase One of Lean Execution to begin in 2026, with roughly 10% of validators opting to validate ZK-proofs. These will likely be lower-spec home validators, allowing the remaining reexecuting validators to raise gas limits safely. The transition depends on mid-year changes that stop penalizing validators for delayed execution.
Glamsterdam Upgrade Removes Key Barriers
The Glamsterdam upgrade introduces ePBS, which gives validators more time to attest to blocks. This removes the current disincentive for ZK validation, as proof generation and propagation take longer than traditional execution. Once implemented, validator participation in ZK-proof validation is expected to rise sharply.
Multiple Proving Systems Ensure Reliability
Because early ZK systems can fail, Ethereum plans to rely on multiple independent proving systems. Validators will accept a block as valid if they receive matching proofs from a majority of these systems. The long-term goal is to move to a single, formally verified proving system, though that milestone is not expected before 2030.
ZK-Proving Hardware Requirements Continue to Drop
While proving does not need to be as decentralized as validation, Ethereum aims to keep proving accessible to advanced home setups. Rapid progress suggests even these targets may be conservative, as proof generation times have fallen dramatically, with some teams now proving blocks in seconds using a fraction of the hardware previously required.
Ethereum’s ZK Roadmap Enters Phase Zero
Ethereum is currently in Phase Zero, where only enthusiasts validate ZK-proofs despite penalties. Phase One in 2026 introduces optional ZK validation at scale, while Phase Two, expected in 2027, will mandate proof generation by block producers and require all validators to rely on ZK-based execution.
Debate Emerges Over RISC-V and Execution Clients
As Ethereum moves deeper into ZK execution, debate is intensifying over whether the EVM should transition to RISC-V. Supporters argue that RISC-V’s simplicity and open standard make it ideal for ZK-proofs, while critics warn that the most battle-tested execution clients face significant challenges adapting to ZK environments.
ZK-Proofs Strengthen Interoperability
According to Matter Labs CEO Alex Gluchowski, ZK-proofs will improve short-term interoperability between chains using shared proving standards and make cross-chain interaction more native in the long run. This positions ZK technology as a foundation not just for scaling, but for ecosystem cohesion.
Ethereum Interoperability Layer Targets Fragmentation
Another major development expected in 2026 is the Ethereum Interoperability Layer. This trustless messaging system allows layer 2 networks to communicate seamlessly, addressing liquidity fragmentation caused by the rapid growth of rollups. The goal is to make Ethereum feel like a single unified chain again.
Account-Based Cross-Chain Execution Without Trust
Built on ERC-4337 account abstraction, the Interoperability Layer enables wallets to execute actions across chains directly, without intermediaries holding funds or submitting transactions on users’ behalf. Liquidity providers simply rebalance pools, removing key trust assumptions present in bridges and solver-based systems.
Faster Interop Depends on Future L1 Upgrades
While production contracts for the Open Intents Framework are already live, the Interoperability Layer will reach its full potential only after faster layer 1 confirmations arrive in future hard forks. Despite this, progress is accelerating toward practical, decentralized cross-chain UX.
Based Rollups Gain New Composability
Based rollups like Taiko, which use Ethereum validators for sequencing, stand to benefit significantly. Shared sequencing enables near real-time composability between rollups, while the Interoperability Layer ensures compatibility with non-based rollups across the ecosystem.
ZKsync Pushes Instant L1–L2 Interoperability
Ethereum’s layer 2 networks are also advancing rapidly. ZKsync’s Atlas upgrade enables near-instant interoperability between Ethereum mainnet and ZKsync chains, allowing assets to remain on L1 while being used in high-speed L2 environments with Ethereum-level security.
Ethereum Liquidity Becomes Directly Accessible to L2s
With Atlas and Gateway, ZKsync chains can tap directly into Ethereum’s deep liquidity without forcing users to bridge funds. L1-to-L2 transfers now finalize faster than a single Ethereum block, and L2-to-L2 transactions occur in roughly one second.
Ethereum Enters Its ZK-Native Era
By the end of 2026, Ethereum is expected to look fundamentally different. ZK-proof validation, improved interoperability, and direct access to mainnet liquidity collectively signal Ethereum’s transition into a ZK-native execution and settlement layer, laying the groundwork for global-scale decentralized applications.