According to Cointelegraph, two prominent members of the Ethereum community, Kevin Owocki and Devansh Mehta, have put forward a proposal for a dynamic fee structure aimed at balancing revenue generation for application builders with fairness in fee extraction. The proposal, introduced on April 27, suggests a simple equation utilizing a square root function to proportionally reduce the percentage of fees as the funding capital allocated to a project increases. This approach is designed to provide higher returns for smaller funding amounts, making it worthwhile to build mechanisms for smaller pools. For instance, if a funding pool amounts to $170,000, the square root function would result in a 7% fee, equating to $13,038.4 as overhead. The proposal also includes a cap on fees at 1% once a project's funding pool surpasses $10 million, ensuring that smaller app builders can develop decentralized applications without excessive fees while promoting growth by capping fees as developers scale their applications.

Owocki and Mehta's proposal highlights the ongoing discussions within the Ethereum community about reforming fee structures and value accrual mechanisms to maintain the network's economic viability in the face of increasing competition. In 2024, the Solana ecosystem attracted more developers than Ethereum, with 7,625 new developers compared to Ethereum's 6,456. Despite this, Ethereum remains the leading ecosystem for developer talent, although its dominance is now being challenged. Solana has emerged as the second choice for decentralized application developers, closing the gap with Ethereum. Meanwhile, onchain analytics firm Santiment reported that Ethereum fees reached a five-year low in April 2025 due to decreased activity on the Ethereum base layer, attributed to reduced demand for smart contract operations such as decentralized finance. This decline in demand has led many institutions to scale back their Ether (ETH) holdings or sell portions of their investments, as investor sentiment toward the pioneering smart-contract platform continues to weaken without any clear catalysts for a turnaround.