
Buterin Wants a Cheaper Ethereum: What It Means for Investors
The idea and some of the facts in this piece come from a report by minfin.com.ua; we've reworked and expanded on it for our own audience.
Vitalik Buterin doesn't hide it: ETH's price isn't what guides his decisions about the network's development. On July 4, 2026, he unveiled "Lean Ethereum" — a roadmap to reduce protocol complexity, cut transaction costs, and simplify network verification; we covered that announcement in detail here. Here we look at a different question: what does the stated goal of "making Ethereum cheaper" actually mean for people holding ETH as an asset?
Buterin's philosophy: price isn't the goal
There's a recent illustration of this. In early 2026, when ETH dropped roughly 60% from its summer highs, Buterin sold $7 million of his own tokens near the market bottom — rather than waiting for a recovery. Around the same time, the Ethereum Foundation announced a five-year "soft austerity" mode and sold 16,384 ETH to fund developers. Neither move was made to prop up the price — both were about giving the Foundation stable funding regardless of market cycles.
What Lean Ethereum actually proposes
Lean Ethereum isn't a single upgrade — it's a series of gradual upgrades following the Glamsterdam and Hegotá phases, aimed at stripping out unnecessary protocol complexity and cutting transaction costs, making the network more accessible and competitive against faster blockchains like Solana.
Why "cheaper" doesn't mean "more valuable for holders"
This is the key nuance for investors: lower fees have not historically guaranteed a higher token price — sometimes the opposite happens:
- The Dencun precedent (March 2024): the upgrade sharply cut Layer 2 transaction costs but didn't sustain ETH's price momentum — a tested outcome, not a hypothesis
- The L2 disconnect: the more users move to Layer 2 networks, the less direct demand there is for ETH itself — L2 fees are minimal and aren't always paid directly in ETH
- Immature L2 infrastructure: many Layer 2 solutions still rely on centralized operators and carry bridge risk between networks
- The broader market backdrop: ETH's price is shaped not just by its technical roadmap but by bitcoin, geopolitics, and overall market sentiment — which often outweigh any technical improvement
What the forecasts say
Price targets for ETH currently span a wide, largely speculative range. Trader Merlijn, for instance, has floated a $15,000 target — far from a consensus view. A more conservative forecast from analyst Mykhailo Ihnatenko puts the accumulation range at $1,400-2,500 by the end of 2026, with a $6,000-6,500 target once the current bull phase completes — expected around early-to-mid 2028; a bearish scenario doesn't rule out a final capitulation down to $1,400-1,500. For comparison, previous ETH accumulation phases lasted roughly a year before giving way to sustained uptrends.
What this means in practice
Buterin's bet on a "cheaper Ethereum" is a bet on the network's long-term utility, not on a short-term token price rally. For investors, that means lower fees alone shouldn't be read as a direct buy signal — the Dencun precedent already showed that technical improvements and token price can move in opposite directions.
This material is for informational purposes only and is not investment advice.

Author
Maks RybalkoReviewer
For the past four to five years, I've been actively interested in the cryptocurrency market, using a variety of tools: trading bots, trading, and long-term investing. I share my personal observations in my articles.
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