The Uniswap community has initiated a pivotal vote to activate protocol fees on all v3 pools operating on the Ethereum mainnet, while also proposing to extend fee collection to eight additional blockchains. As a leading decentralized exchange renowned for its high trading volume, Uniswap is aiming to radically overhaul its fee structure with this move, seeking greater efficiency and a stronger link between protocol activity and token value.
New Fee Model Brings Automation to Uniswap
Under the newly proposed system, Uniswap intends to replace manual governance decisions with an automated fee adaptor. This mechanism would enable the application of a tiered protocol fee across all v3 pools in accordance with the specific fee levels selected by liquidity providers. The result: revenue generation becomes faster and more streamlined, as every individual pool would no longer require separate governance approval.
Voting on the proposal is set to conclude on February 23. Should it pass, automatic fee application will be implemented in the pools, directing collected revenue straight to the protocol’s treasury. A portion of these funds is earmarked for the scheduled burning of UNI tokens, reinforcing a direct relationship between protocol usage and token value appreciation.
Multichain Expansion and UNI Burn Mechanism
The proposal also outlines an expansion of protocol fees beyond Ethereum, targeting deployments of v2 and v3 on eight additional blockchains. The networks set to be included are Arbitrum, Base, Celo, OP Mainnet, Soneium, X Layer, Worldchain, and Zora. Fees amassed on Layer 2 chains will accumulate in network-specific TokenJar contracts before being transferred to Ethereum. There, they’ll be directed into the Firepit smart contract for permanent UNI token burns.
This key change ensures Uniswap’s protocol revenues are no longer tethered solely to Ethereum. Instead, it creates sustainable revenue streams across prominent scalability solutions. As the token burning process reduces overall UNI supply, observers believe this approach could positively influence the token’s long-term value.
Uniswap Notches Legal Win for AMM Technology
Uniswap recently secured an important legal victory related to its automated market maker (AMM) technology. Founder Hayden Adams revealed that a U.S. court has ruled on whether Uniswap’s AMM algorithm is eligible for patent protection. The federal court decision went in Uniswap’s favor, affirming that the core protocol algorithm remains free for public use.
The lawsuit attracted headlines after entities associated with Bancor attempted to patent the AMM formula. The court’s decision blocked that attempt, marking a significant moment for the decentralized finance sector by safeguarding open-source innovation as a foundational principle for the industry.
Hayden Adams further commented on social media, highlighting that initial monitoring of protocol fees on mainnet v2 pools and selected v3 pools produced positive outcomes. Adams advocated for extending protocol fees to all v3 pools and the additional eight blockchains noted in the new proposal.
Since UNIfication, fees have been monitored on mainnet v2 and many v3 pools. After implementation, total value locked grew in market-aligned pools, and burning proved effective. The current proposal aims to activate fees in the remaining v3 pools and across eight new blockchains.
Uniswap’s move to introduce a unified protocol fee and burning mechanism is seen as a critical inflection point for its evolving governance model. The implications for liquidity providers and market participants are expected to come into clearer focus in the near future.




