Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin said Sunday that nearly the majority of validators with staked ETH running the blockchain have signaled intent to increase the gas limit, allowing for more transaction throughput on the blockchain.
According to the dashboard gaslimit.pics, as of July 21, 2025, 49% of validators’ staked ETH have indicated that they are in favor of upping the gas limit to reach 45 million units.
Gas Limit Signaling July 21, 2025 (gaslimit.pics)
On Ethereum, gas is the unit that measures the computational work required to execute transactions or smart contracts. Whenever a user interacts with the blockchain, they must pay a gas fee, which covers the cost of using Ethereum’s computing resources. This ensures users pay in proportion to the complexity of their actions.
Each block on Ethereum has a gas limit, which is the maximum amount of gas that can be consumed by all transactions in that block. If the total gas needed by pending transactions exceeds the block’s limit, some transactions are postponed to future blocks. Because space is limited, transactions compete for inclusion, and those offering higher fees are more likely to be included first.
The move to bring the gas limit up to 45 million comes as Ethereum’s native token (ETH) broke through $3800 over the weekend and large institutions have deployed capital to use the blockchain for infrastructure and for other financial applications.
The gas limit was previously raised in February, when it was set to 36 million. It was the first time since 2021 that it had been raised, after more than half of the validators on the network supported the change, without needing a hard fork.
While Ethereum core developers are keen to scale the blockchain to include more transactions, they are not stopping at this limit. “We’re targeting 45 million for now, with a plan for higher soon after”, said Parithosh Jayanthri, a DevOps Engineer at the Ethereum Foundation, in a message to CoinDesk. “There’s a lot planned for the next few years.”