Cross-chain AA centralizes control. The technical complexity of managing smart accounts, gas payments, and security across heterogeneous chains like Ethereum, Solana, and Cosmos is prohibitive for most teams. This creates a natural moat for specialized infrastructure providers like Biconomy and Safe{Wallet}, who will become the default custodians of user experience and security.
Why Cross-Chain AA Will Centralize Wallet Infrastructure
The technical complexity of synchronizing smart account state and security across multiple blockchains will create insurmountable barriers, leading to infrastructure centralization around a few dominant players.
Introduction
Cross-chain account abstraction will consolidate wallet infrastructure into a few dominant, centralized service providers.
The wallet becomes a service. The end-user wallet interface (e.g., a frontend) will decouple from the core smart account logic. Users will interact with a simple UI, while the heavy lifting—signature aggregation, cross-chain intent routing via LayerZero or Axelar, and gas abstraction—is handled by centralized relayers and bundlers.
Interoperability standards create oligopolies. While ERC-4337 and RIP-7212 enable permissionless innovation, the economic reality favors integration with a few dominant cross-chain messaging layers. Wallets that optimize for lowest latency and highest success rate will route user operations through the same centralized sequencer networks used by Across Protocol and Stargate.
Evidence: The Relayer Model. Today, over 60% of gas-sponsored transactions on Polygon are processed by a single relayer service. This pattern will replicate and intensify in a multi-chain AA world, where cross-chain state synchronization demands even greater capital efficiency and coordination.
The Centralization Thesis
Cross-chain account abstraction creates an economic and technical imperative for wallet infrastructure to centralize around a few dominant players.
Cross-chain state synchronization is expensive. Maintaining a consistent user identity and session keys across heterogeneous chains like Ethereum, Solana, and Arbitrum requires a persistent, low-latency off-chain service. This creates a natural moat for infrastructure providers like Safe, Biconomy, and Pimlico, who can amortize these costs across millions of users.
Intent-based transaction routing centralizes power. Wallets like Rabby and Brale that abstract gas and route user intents become the new market makers for block space. They will integrate with solvers from CowSwap, UniswapX, and Across, deciding which chains and bridges users interact with. This gatekeeper role consolidates liquidity and user flow.
The bundler market will oligopolize. Just as block builders like Flashbots and bloXroute dominate MEV extraction, cross-chain bundlers that can source liquidity from LayerZero and Circle's CCTP will achieve unbeatable economies of scale. Smaller players cannot compete on execution price or speed.
Evidence: Look at RPC providers. The market consolidated around Alchemy and Infura because running high-availability, multi-chain nodes is a capital-intensive commodity business. Cross-chain AA service layers are the next iteration of this dynamic.
The Centralizing Forces at Play
Account abstraction's cross-chain promise creates a winner-take-most dynamic for infrastructure providers, concentrating power in the relay layer.
The Relayer Monopoly
Cross-chain user operations require a relayer to sponsor gas and execute transactions across chains. This creates a single point of failure and control.
- Economic Moats: Relayers with $10M+ in staked gas liquidity become essential utilities.
- Censorship Risk: A dominant relayer (e.g., Biconomy, Pimlico) can filter or reorder user intents.
- Data Dominance: The relayer sees the complete cross-chain transaction graph, creating a data monopoly.
Bundler Protocol Inertia
The ERC-4337 standard defines bundlers but not their cross-chain coordination. First-mover bundler networks will capture protocol integrations.
- Network Effects: Wallets integrate the bundler with the best ~500ms latency and 99.9% uptime, creating a feedback loop.
- Vendor Lock-in: Switching bundlers requires wallet UI/contract changes, a high friction cost for developers.
- Fee Market Control: Dominant bundlers influence priority fee markets across multiple chains.
Paymaster as a Strategic Asset
The entity paying gas fees (paymaster) dictates economic policy and captures user relationships, centralizing the payment stack.
- Subsidy Power: Paymasters like Visa or Stripe could onboard millions by abstracting gas, but control the payment rail.
- Compliance Gatekeeping: Regulated paymasters become mandatory for fiat on-ramps, enforcing KYC/AML across chains.
- Revenue Capture: The paymaster intermediates all fee abstraction, taking a cut from every sponsored transaction.
Intent-Based Routing Centralization
Solving for user intents (e.g., 'swap X for Y cheapest across chains') requires a centralized solver/aggregator, not a permissionless mempool.
- Solver Oligopoly: Complex cross-chain routing is dominated by a few players (e.g., UniswapX, CowSwap, Across solvers).
- Opaque Execution: Users cannot verify if the solver provided the optimal route, trusting a black box.
- MEV Capture: Solvers internalize the most profitable cross-chain arbitrage, extracting value that could go to users.
The Infrastructure Burden Matrix
Comparing the operational and security burdens of different cross-chain account abstraction (AA) models on wallet providers.
| Infrastructure Burden | Native Smart Wallets (e.g., Safe, Biconomy) | Cross-Chain AA via Aggregators (e.g., Socket, Li.Fi) | Cross-Chain AA via Intent-Based Networks (e.g., UniswapX, Across) |
|---|---|---|---|
User Key Custody | Wallet Provider | Wallet Provider | Solver Network |
Cross-Chain Gas Sponsorship | Wallet Provider | Aggregator/Relayer | Solver Network |
State Synchronization Logic | Wallet Provider | Aggregator SDK | Intent Settlement Layer |
MEV Capture on Destination Chain | |||
Fee Revenue Model | Subscription/Gas Markup | Aggregator Fee Share | Solver Competition |
Avg. Time to Add New Chain | 3-6 weeks | < 1 week | 0 weeks (Chain-Agnostic) |
Primary Security Surface | Wallet's Signer Logic | Aggregator's Adapter Security | Solver Bonding & Dispute Resolution |
The Slippery Slope to Oligopoly
Cross-chain account abstraction creates winner-take-all dynamics that will consolidate wallet infrastructure into a few dominant players.
Cross-chain AA centralizes relayers. The entity controlling the intent-solver network that fulfills cross-chain user operations becomes the de facto gatekeeper. This mirrors the centralization risks seen in intent-based bridges like Across and UniswapX, where solver networks control flow.
Wallet competition becomes infrastructure competition. Wallets like Safe, Biconomy, and Etherspot must now operate or subsidize global solver networks. This creates massive capital and operational overhead that only well-funded entities can sustain, eroding the permissionless ethos.
The network effect is absolute. A solver network with the deepest liquidity and most routes, akin to a LayerZero or Wormhole of intents, achieves unbeatable efficiency. Users and developers naturally consolidate on the dominant system, creating a protocol-level moat.
Evidence: The Solver market for CowSwap and UniswapX is already dominated by a handful of professional players. Extending this model to cross-chain user states (not just assets) will replicate and intensify this concentration.
The Hopium: Standards & Permissionless Relays
The push for cross-chain account abstraction will consolidate wallet infrastructure into a few dominant relay networks.
Standards create centralization vectors. ERC-4337 and ERC-7579 define interfaces, but the relay infrastructure that fulfills cross-chain intents becomes the new choke point. This mirrors how HTTP is open, but AWS/GCP dominate traffic.
Permissionless relays are a myth. Executing a cross-chain user operation requires capital for gas, MEV protection, and liquidity access. This creates economic moats favoring incumbents like Gelato, Biconomy, and Pimlico.
Wallet SDKs dictate flow. Projects like ZeroDev and Rhinestone will embed preferred relayers into their developer toolkits. App developers adopt the path of least resistance, herding users to a handful of providers.
Evidence: In L2 rollups, over 80% of transactions are already routed through 2-3 dominant sequencers. The same relay oligopoly will emerge for cross-chain AA, controlling the critical messaging layer between chains.
The Emerging Oligarchs
Account abstraction's cross-chain future will consolidate wallet infrastructure into a few dominant players, creating systemic risk and new points of failure.
The Bundler Monopoly
Cross-chain user operations require a global sequencer network to order and relay intents. The entity controlling this network becomes the de facto gatekeeper for all cross-chain UX.\n- Dominates fee markets and transaction ordering\n- Single point of censorship for multi-chain activity\n- ~70% of AA wallets could rely on 2-3 major bundler providers
Paymaster as a Political Tool
Sponsored transactions are the killer app for mass adoption. The largest paymaster becomes the subsidy arm for entire ecosystems, deciding which chains, dApps, and user cohorts succeed.\n- Controls economic access via gas sponsorship policies\n- Can enforce KYC/AML at the infrastructure layer\n- $100M+ monthly in potential subsidy budgets creates winner-take-all dynamics
The Intent Solver Cartel
Cross-chain AA necessitates intent-based architectures (like UniswapX or CowSwap). Solving these intents requires deep liquidity and MEV capture, favoring a cartel of specialized solvers (e.g., Across, Socket).\n- Captures MEV across every chain simultaneously\n- Extracts rent via solution fees on all user flows\n- Creates dependency where wallet UX is dictated by solver economics
Interoperability Protocol Lock-In
Wallets will standardize on a single cross-chain messaging layer (e.g., LayerZero, Axelar, Wormhole) for AA state synchronization. This creates protocol-level vendor lock-in and systemic risk.\n- Security failure in one protocol compromises all connected wallets\n- Governance capture by a single entity dictates upgrade paths\n- $1B+ in TVL secured by a handful of multisigs
The Smart Account Factory Standard
ERC-4337 account creation is governed by a Singleton Factory. The entity controlling the dominant factory's upgrade keys defines the feature set for billions of future accounts.\n- Can enforce mandatory features (e.g., social recovery providers)\n- Single point of failure for account creation globally\n- First-mover advantage creates irreversible network effects
Regulatory Attack Surface Consolidation
Centralized choke points (Bundlers, Paymasters) make KYC/AML enforcement trivial for regulators. A handful of incorporated entities can be forced to comply, breaking permissionless access.\n- Travel Rule compliance can be mandated at the bundler level\n- Geoblocking becomes a simple config change for infrastructure providers\n- Tornado Cash precedent applied to core AA infrastructure
TL;DR for Builders and Investors
Cross-chain account abstraction (AA) solves UX but creates a new, more insidious form of centralization at the wallet layer.
The Bundler Monopoly Problem
Cross-chain user operations must be routed and executed by a single entity. This creates a single point of failure and censorship for a user's entire multi-chain identity.
- Key Risk: The dominant bundler (e.g., Pimlico, Stackup, Alchemy) becomes the gatekeeper.
- Key Metric: A top-3 bundler on a major chain can process >60% of all AA transactions.
Paymaster as the New Ad Network
Gas sponsorship is the killer app for AA. The entity paying for cross-chain gas (Paymaster) captures immense data and influence.
- Key Risk: Paymasters like ZeroDev or Biconomy become the Google Ads of Web3, dictating economic viability.
- Key Metric: A dominant paymaster can extract 10-30% margins on sponsored transaction flows, creating a tax on interoperability.
Vendor Lock-in via Signature Aggregation
Cross-chain AA relies on custom signature schemes (e.g., ERC-4337 + LayerZero's DVNs). Wallet SDKs bundle these proprietary protocols.
- Key Risk: Builders choose an SDK (Privy, Dynamic), not a standard. Migrating wallets means losing your user graph.
- Key Metric: Switching wallet infra providers can incur $500k+ in migration costs and >3 months of engineering time.
The Solution: Aggressive Modularization
The only defense is to decompose the wallet stack. Force competition at each layer: signature, bundling, paymaster, and key management.
- Key Action: Build with pluggable modules. Use EIP-7677 for external signers and ERC-4337's permissionless bundler spec.
- Key Metric: A modular stack can reduce dependency on any single vendor by over 80%, preserving optionality.
The Solution: Intent-Based Routing
Shift from imperative transactions ('do X on chain Y') to declarative intents ('get me the best price'). Let a competitive solver network handle the cross-chain execution.
- Key Action: Integrate UniswapX or CowSwap-style solvers. Use Across or Socket for liquidity routing.
- Key Metric: Intent markets can improve cross-chain swap prices by >5% and break bundler/paymaster bundling.
The Solution: Own the Social Graph
Centralization is about data. Decouple user identity (social keys, passkeys) from wallet execution clients. Own the graph, rent the infrastructure.
- Key Action: Implement ERC-4337 Smart Accounts with EIP-7212 secp256r1 (passkey) signers. Use Lit Protocol for decentralized key management.
- Key Metric: Portable social graphs increase user LTV by 3-5x and make infra vendors commoditized.
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