Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin and developer Anders Elowsson have introduced EIP-7999, a proposal to streamline Ethereum’s transaction fee structure. 

Released on Tuesday, the proposal seeks to establish a unified multidimensional fee market, allowing users to specify a single aggregate maximum fee for multiple resources. 

The proposal, if adopted, would eliminate the need to estimate and manage multiple fee components when submitting transactions and let users specify one all-encompassing maximum fee, making paying for transactions simpler and more predictable. 

The proposal is described as a way to “simplify fee management by letting users specify a single max fee across multiple transaction resources, improving capital efficiency and user experience.” 

It is under community review and discussion ahead of potential implementation.

Circle, Tether, Tron, Ethereum 2.0
Source: Ethereum Magicians

Ethereum’s long-time problem with gas fees

Ethereum’s gas fees have been a persistent challenge since the network’s rapid growth in 2017, when a surge in decentralized applications (DApps) and initial coin offerings (ICOs) led to increased congestion and soaring transaction costs.

The situation worsened during the 2021 DeFi summer and NFT boom, when average gas fees often exceeded $50 per transaction. 

In response, Ethereum implemented the EIP-1559 upgrade in August 2021, which introduced a base fee burn and aimed to stabilize fees. Although it helped moderate fee spikes, periods of high congestion still resulted in volatile and sometimes prohibitive gas costs.

To further ease the burden, layer 2 scaling solutions like Optimism and Arbitrum gained popularity, processing transactions offchain to lower fees. However, Ethereum’s mainnet fees remained a concern, prompting ongoing development efforts culminating in the Dencun upgrade in March 2024.

Dencun’s impact: gas fees fall as competitors gain ground

The Dencun upgrade, implemented on March 13, 2024, introduced nine Ethereum Improvement Proposals (EIPs) to improve scalability and lower transaction costs, particularly for layer-2 solutions.

Within a year, average gas fees for common transactions dropped 95%, from about $86 to $0.39, according to Etherscan data. Ethereum’s native token price fell over 50%, reflecting broader market challenges.

Ethereum still remained the top blockchain by transaction fee revenue in 2024, earning $2.48 billion, a 3% increase over 2023. However, fee income was volatile after Dencun, as competitors gained ground.

In the same year, Tron’s fees more than doubled to $2.15 billion, driven mainly by stablecoin transactions, and Solana’s fees surged 2,838% to $750 million amid a spike in network activity.

According to data from Token Terminal, over the last 365 days, Ethereum’s revenue generated by fees stands at $757.4 million at this writing.

Circle, Tether, Tron, Ethereum 2.0
Ethereum's network total revenue in 365 days. Source: Token Terminal