Ethereum's Upcoming Fusaka Upgrade: An Overview

The Ethereum network is gearing up for another major upgrade. The Fusaka upgrade (short for Fulu-Osaka), slated for launch in December 2025, will introduce significant adjustments to both Ethereum's execution and consensus layers.

The Fusaka upgrade marks another milestone for Ethereum since the 2022 merge. The Shapella upgrade in 2023 introduced staked ETH withdrawals; the Dencun upgrade in 2024 introduced proto-Danksharding technology and blobs; the Pectra upgrade in 2025 aims to enhance validator flexibility and Layer 2 interoperability. According to the roadmap, the Fusaka upgrade aims to expand data capacity, strengthen resistance to DoS attacks, and introduce new tools for developers and users. This upgrade has far-reaching implications.

Fusaka is not a minor patch but a redesign of Ethereum’s data availability management, blob pricing, and transaction protection mechanisms. Its success hinges on Ethereum's ability to achieve scalability to meet growing Layer 2 network demands without causing network fragmentation or excessively burdening node operators.

PeerDAS: Sampling Instead of Storing All Data

The core functionality of the Fusaka upgrade is PeerDAS, a novel way of handling blobs. In Ethereum, blobs are temporary data packets introduced in the Dencun upgrade with the proto-Danksharding technology. It allows Rollups to submit large amounts of transaction data to the mainnet at low cost, thereby increasing scalability without permanently increasing the blockchain state. This ensures redundancy, but also creates bottlenecks as demand grows.

In the current mode, every full node in Ethereum must store all Layer 2 network blobs submitted to the chain. PeerDAS changes this logic. Each node only needs to store a fraction (approximately one-eighth) of a blob, relying on cryptographic reconstruction technology to fill in missing data fragments. This design verifies data availability through random sampling, with a very low error probability of only 10²⁰ to 10²⁴. Through this distributed storage method, Ethereum can theoretically increase blob throughput by 8x without requiring node operators to upgrade hardware or bandwidth.

Rollups, which rely on blob publishing to compress transaction data, are expected to be the most direct beneficiaries.

Blob Economics and Flexibility

The Fusaka upgrade also reshapes blob pricing and management mechanisms. A key adjustment is EIP-7918, which introduces a minimum reserve fee for blobs. Under current rules, blob prices can fall to near zero when execution layer gas fees dominate, incentivizing inefficient usage behavior. The minimum reserve fee ensures there is always a baseline cost for blob usage, forcing Layer 2s to pay for the storage and bandwidth they consume. Another mechanism is EIP-7892, which introduces a fork that only adjusts blob parameters. This allows Ethereum clients to adjust blob throughput without a complete hard fork, aiming to allow developers to respond flexibly to unpredictable Layer 2 demands without waiting for the next scheduled upgrade.

Enhancing Attack Defense

Scaling also means Ethereum’s attack surface expands. The Fusaka upgrade contains a series of adjustments to limit extreme cases and protect the network from DoS attacks:

  • EIP-7823: Limits the input size of the MODEXP operation to 8192 bits.
  • EIP-7825: Sets the gas limit per transaction at 2²⁴ units.
  • EIP-7883: Increases the gas cost for large exponents in MODEXP to better match the computational workload.
  • EIP-7934: Limits the execution layer block size to 10MB.

These adjustments collectively reduce the risk of clients being overwhelmed, propagation stalling, or network instability due to extreme transactions or oversized blocks.

New Tools for Users and Developers

The Fusaka upgrade is also committed to improving usability. For users, EIP-7917 introduces pre-confirmation support. This allows wallets and applications to view validator proposal timelines in advance, enabling users to lock in certainty that transactions will be included in subsequent blocks, thereby reducing latency and decreasing transaction confirmation uncertainty. For developers, the Fusaka upgrade adds two significant functions:

  • CLZ opcode, suitable for cryptographic algorithms and contract optimization.
  • EIP-7951, which provides native secp256r1 (P-256) signature verification.

This is an elliptic curve commonly used in hardware devices and mobile systems, and its addition will improve compatibility and account abstraction capabilities. These adjustments aim to lower the barriers to entry for application developers, paving the way for new wallet designs and security models.

What ETH Holders Need to Know

For ordinary Ethereum users, no actions are necessary for the Fusaka upgrade. Account balances, tokens, and applications will operate as usual. The Ethereum official website emphasizes that users should be wary of scams that require ETH upgrades or transfers; the upgrade does not require such operations. The responsibility primarily falls on validators and node operators, who must simultaneously upgrade their execution layer and consensus layer clients. Coordination is crucial: if validators are not synchronized, the network may face downtime or temporary forking risks. Following a series of successful testnet launches, the Fusaka upgrade is scheduled to launch on the Ethereum mainnet on December 3, 2025.

The Future of Ethereum After the Fusaka Upgrade

The Fusaka upgrade is one of the boldest initiatives in the Ethereum roadmap since the merge. It seeks to achieve three major goals simultaneously through a single, coordinated release: increasing blob capacity, enhancing defense, and updating developer tools. Testing and development are ongoing, with client teams focusing on PeerDAS performance, the blob pricing model, and the compatibility between the execution layer and consensus layer software. If the upgrade is successful, Fusaka is expected to become a turning point for Ethereum in responding to the next wave of Layer 2 network adoption and improving its scalability.


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