Ethereum has raised its block gas limit from 45 million to 60 million, marking a step toward expanding base-layer throughput. The change took effect on November 25 after more than half of the network validators signaled approval, meeting the consensus threshold.
According to GasLimit.pics and researcher Toni Wahrstätter from the Ethereum Foundation, the change reflects a year-long push by the Ethereum community for higher capacity. He wrote, “Just a year after the community started pushing for higher gas limits, Ethereum is now running with a 60M block gas limit.”
The increase allows more transactions per block and comes days ahead of the anticipated Fusaka hard fork, set for December 3, according to Ethereum developer coordination.
The Fusaka upgrade introduces PeerDAS, or Peer Data Availability Sampling, a redesign aimed at improving data availability for rollups. The architecture is expected to support more efficient rollup operations, which depend on quick and scalable data access.
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin described PeerDAS as “key to Ethereum scaling” in earlier posts. The feature is designed to make the network more reliable for rollup execution, which is a core component of Ethereum’s Layer 2 scaling strategy.
Fusaka also includes routine updates such as client optimizations, consensus rule refinements, and enhanced security measures. It has already been tested on multiple networks and has an active audit contest with a $2 million reward pool.
The gas limit increase comes as Ethereum’s broader scaling ecosystem recorded its highest throughput to date. According to GrowThePie, scaling networks processed 31,000 transactions per second in the past 24 hours.
Rollups like Lighter, a perpetuals-focused zero-knowledge rollup with about $1.2 billion in TVL, led with around 5,455 TPS. Other platforms such as Base and various Layer 2 networks contributed to this throughput surge, indicating increasing demand for scalable transaction solutions.
Zhixiong Pan, an independent blockchain researcher, attributed the stable capacity to several factors. These include the implementation of EIP-7623, improvements across Ethereum clients, and positive performance in test environments.
Ethereum attempted to reclaim a key resistance level this week but was rejected after a short-term recovery. Analyst Ted Pillows stated the cryptocurrency remains at risk of forming a new low unless it breaks above this resistance with strong volume.
However, the upcoming Fusaka upgrade may act as a trigger for a rally. Past upgrades like Pectra led to a post-upgrade rally and longer-term gains. If Ethereum follows a similar pattern, analysts expect a move toward higher resistance in December.
Michaël van de Poppe noted Ethereum’s BTC pair is approaching a breakout level, while analyst Merlijn The Trader identified recurring wave structures that often lead to price surges. Both suggest possible momentum building in the lead-up to Fusaka.
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