L2 Fee Revenue Flips Mainnet as Rollups Become the Default Highway
The ledger finally tilted. Aggregate fees paid to Ethereum Layer-2 networks crossed $4.8 million daily this week, overtaking Layer-1 mainnet revenue for the first time outside of airdrop events. Arbitrum and Base led with $1.9 million and $1.3 million respectively, driven by a surge in perpetuals, social apps, and gaming ticks that now settle in sub-cent batches. The flip matters because it proves users choose speed and cost over brand when the security guarantee is inherited.
Blob usage tells the backstory. After EIP-4844, rollups post data to Ethereum as blobs at 1/10th the prior cost, yet throughput keeps climbing. Average blob count hit 6.2 per block, with Base and Arbitrum alone filling 71% of capacity. That pushes L2 margins up: sequencer profit on Base ran 38% last month, and the chain now funds its own grants program without token sales.
Capital followed. L2 TVL rose to $47.2 billion, while bridging volume from mainnet jumped 34% week-over-week. More telling is app migration. Uniswap v4 trials on Optimism show 92% of swap volume staying on L2 even when gas on mainnet drops, suggesting user habit formation is complete.
Risk shifts from tech to alignment. Sequencer centralization remains the attack vector, and fraud-proof systems on Arbitrum and fraud-proof-less designs on Base create different trust models. Yet the market voted with fees. As long as users pay rollups, not mainnet, the economic center of Ethereum has moved up one layer. The base chain becomes a settlement court, while execution happens elsewhere.
#Ethereum #Layer2 #Arbitrum #Base #Rollups
The ledger finally tilted. Aggregate fees paid to Ethereum Layer-2 networks crossed $4.8 million daily this week, overtaking Layer-1 mainnet revenue for the first time outside of airdrop events. Arbitrum and Base led with $1.9 million and $1.3 million respectively, driven by a surge in perpetuals, social apps, and gaming ticks that now settle in sub-cent batches. The flip matters because it proves users choose speed and cost over brand when the security guarantee is inherited.
Blob usage tells the backstory. After EIP-4844, rollups post data to Ethereum as blobs at 1/10th the prior cost, yet throughput keeps climbing. Average blob count hit 6.2 per block, with Base and Arbitrum alone filling 71% of capacity. That pushes L2 margins up: sequencer profit on Base ran 38% last month, and the chain now funds its own grants program without token sales.
Capital followed. L2 TVL rose to $47.2 billion, while bridging volume from mainnet jumped 34% week-over-week. More telling is app migration. Uniswap v4 trials on Optimism show 92% of swap volume staying on L2 even when gas on mainnet drops, suggesting user habit formation is complete.
Risk shifts from tech to alignment. Sequencer centralization remains the attack vector, and fraud-proof systems on Arbitrum and fraud-proof-less designs on Base create different trust models. Yet the market voted with fees. As long as users pay rollups, not mainnet, the economic center of Ethereum has moved up one layer. The base chain becomes a settlement court, while execution happens elsewhere.
#Ethereum #Layer2 #Arbitrum #Base #Rollups




