Cardano Van Rossem Hard Fork Is Live on Mainnet Today The post Cardano’s Van Rossem Hard Fork Goes Live: What ADA Holders Need to Know appeared first on icobenchCardano Van Rossem Hard Fork Is Live on Mainnet Today The post Cardano’s Van Rossem Hard Fork Goes Live: What ADA Holders Need to Know appeared first on icobench

Cardano’s Van Rossem Hard Fork Goes Live: What ADA Holders Need to Know

2026/06/18 17:51
4 min read
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In the latest Cardano news, Cardano’s Van Rossem hard fork reached its mainnet go/no-go decision point on June 15, 2026, with ratification confirmed on June 13 via a DRep vote of 68.57% approval weighted by ADA stake, a 5-of-7 Constitutional Committee sign-off, and block-production readiness running at 84% from Protocol Version 11 nodes over the five days to June 12, positioning mainnet enactment for June 18, 2026 at 21:45 UTC, well ahead of the original July 18 expiry window.

This is the first hard fork in Cardano’s history initiated entirely through the Voltaire on-chain governance framework, replacing IOG’s unilateral control with a three-body ratification model that required DReps, the Constitutional Committee, and stake pool operators to each independently clear their thresholds before the upgrade could proceed.

ADA was trading down approximately 2.86% at the time of publication, sitting deep in bear-phase territory, more than 83% below its 52-week high, as the technical milestone landed against a difficult macro backdrop.

The open question the market must now resolve is whether Protocol Version 11’s governance precedent functions as a structural re-rating catalyst for ADA or whether the upgrade arrives too late in a cycle where institutional and retail attention has already rotated elsewhere.

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Cardano News: Voltaire Governance Mechanics: What the Three-Body Ratification Process Actually Reveals About Cardano’s Power Transfer

But beyond the headline Cardano news, context significantly enhances the raw approval figures. The 68.57% DRep approval is not a simple majority vote; DReps, or Delegated Representatives, hold voting power proportional to the ADA stake that individual holders have delegated to them, meaning the figure represents a weighted consensus across a distributed, stake-backed electorate rather than a headcount.

That structural distinction is what separates the Van Rossem decision from every prior Cardano upgrade, where IOG scheduled and executed hard forks using the hard-fork combinator without requiring on-chain ratification from any community body.

The Constitutional Committee, a seven-member body tasked with ensuring governance actions comply with Cardano’s on-chain constitution, delivered a 5-of-7 vote in favour, satisfying the ratification threshold and clearing the second gate.

The third gate applies to stake pool operators: per Cardano’s constitution-aligned policy, at least 85% of the stake held by active pools must run node 11.0.1 before the hard fork executes, a threshold designed to prevent chain fragmentation at the fork boundary. The 84% block-production figure from Cexplorer and the 76% of current-epoch block production on Protocol Version 11 reported by PoolTool indicate the network was approaching but had not formally cleared that threshold as of June 12. Enactment on June 18 implies the 85% bar was met in the intervening days.

The governance action for the hard fork itself was submitted in Epoch 637 on June 16, with an expiry of July 18, 2026, and potential enactment dates pre-signalled as June 28, July 3, 8, 13, 18, and 23. That ratification cleared on June 13, pulling enactment to June 18, demonstrates that the Voltaire framework can move faster than its expiry windows suggest when readiness converges.

For ADA holders, the practical implication is that future protocol changes, including the forthcoming Dijkstra era and the Leios scaling rollout, will clear the same three-body gauntlet, meaning no single actor can schedule or block an upgrade unilaterally. That governance architecture is either a feature or a friction cost, depending on how the market prices decentralisation against execution speed.

The naming vote itself was a proof of concept for the system Van Rossem is designed to cement. In January and February 2026, Intersect ran an on-chain DRep vote to name Protocol Version 11 in honour of Max van Rossem, a Cardano governance contributor who passed away on January 11, 2026, the same day his son, Max Louis Hans van Rossem, was born.

Support exceeded 80% of active DRep stake, one of the most decisive governance votes the network has recorded. Intersect wrote in its June 12 update: “He will grow up in a world where the blockchain his father helped shape carries his family name, a hard fork named not for a product or a protocol milestone, but for a human being who gave his time, his mind, and his heart to a decentralized future he believed in.”

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The post Cardano’s Van Rossem Hard Fork Goes Live: What ADA Holders Need to Know appeared first on icobench.com.

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