ZKsync, an Ethereum Layer 2 scaling solution, plans to intensify efforts to drive real-world use cases in 2026. The company’s new roadmap, shared by Matter Labs CEO Alex Gluchowski, outlines a focus on institutional adoption. ZKsync aims to establish itself as a critical infrastructure provider for regulated financial institutions and large enterprises.
ZKsync’s roadmap highlights four key principles for its product development: privacy by default, deterministic control, verifiable risk management, and native connectivity to global markets. These principles are designed to ensure that the platform can meet the needs of institutional players. Gluchowski stated that these standards are part of a deliberate decision to focus on building for real-world constraints. He emphasized that the goal is to create an infrastructure where trust is rooted in cryptography, rather than relying on intermediaries or human operators.
A core part of ZKsync’s strategy is to expand its privacy-focused blockchain platform, Prividium. This platform is tailored to meet the demands of banks, asset managers, and other institutions that need to integrate privacy directly into their workflows. The focus is on making the platform intuitive for enterprises, offering solutions for access management, transaction approvals, auditing, and reporting.
ZKsync plans to further develop its zero-knowledge blockchain toolkit, ZK Stack, into a comprehensive solution for building application-specific blockchains. The ZK Stack aims to offer an easy path for enterprises to deploy appchains with simpler integration and greater composability. Gluchowski mentioned that this toolkit will also offer liquidity access and execution services across multiple chains, enabling smoother operations for institutions.
The recent Atlas upgrade to the ZK Stack, rolled out in October, improved the system’s transaction speed and flexibility. This upgrade enhances ZKsync’s ability to support enterprises migrating their operations on-chain. Gluchowski also highlighted the company’s settlement proving engine, Airbender, which aims to become a universal standard for zero-knowledge virtual machines.
ZKsync’s continued focus on institutional partnerships is expected to yield practical deployments. In 2026, ZKsync anticipates launching production systems for regulated financial institutions and large enterprises. These deployments aim to serve millions of end users, expanding ZKsync’s real-world presence and adoption.
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