Venture capital subsidizes user gas to drive adoption, creating a growth mirage that collapses when subsidies end. This is the core flaw of the 'gasless' narrative. Applications like Pimlico and Biconomy abstract gas fees, but the cost is simply transferred to the app's treasury, which is often funded by speculative capital.
The Future of Gas: Who Really Pays in Your Embedded Model?
Gas sponsorship via paymasters is a venture-subsidized mirage. Sustainable models require users to pay with ERC-20s or for dApps to absorb costs as a core business expense. We analyze the economics and technical paths forward.
Introduction: The Venture-Backed Mirage
Embedded gas models shift the payment burden from users to applications, creating a hidden cost that distorts economic reality.
The true cost of abstraction is a hidden tax on protocol revenue. Every 'free' user transaction paid for by an app's wallet is a direct expense. This model is unsustainable without perpetual VC funding or a profitable core business, a reality ignored by most ERC-4337 account abstraction pitches.
Compare this to the real world: Visa and AWS bake infrastructure costs into their service fees; they don't give away transactions for free. In crypto, the embedded gas model pretends infrastructure is free, delaying the inevitable need for applications to build real economic moats beyond subsidy.
Core Thesis: The Subsidy Cliff is Coming
Embedded gas sponsorship is a temporary subsidy that will collapse under user growth, forcing protocols to confront true transaction costs.
User acquisition subsidies are unsustainable. Protocols like Biconomy and Particle Network currently abstract gas fees to onboard users, but this model functions as a venture-funded marketing expense. The subsidy cost scales linearly with user activity, creating a direct financial liability for the sponsoring entity.
The 'cliff' triggers at scale. When a dApp's daily active users (DAU) cross a critical threshold, the gas sponsorship bill becomes a primary P&L line item. This moment forces a choice: pass costs to users, degrade UX with slower confirmations, or find a new architectural primitive.
Account abstraction (ERC-4337) delays, not solves. While ERC-4337 Paymasters enable more flexible sponsorship, they do not change the underlying economic reality. The sponsor still pays the L1/L2 sequencer. This shifts the problem from engineering to treasury management.
Evidence: Base's Onchain Summer campaign, sponsored by Coinbase, demonstrated the model's power and its cost. Scaling that campaign's volume 100x would require a dedicated, multi-million dollar gas treasury, a burden unsustainable for most protocols.
The Current Landscape: Three Unsustainable Trends
Today's embedded models rely on unsustainable subsidies, creating hidden costs and centralization risks.
The Relayer Ponzi Scheme
Apps like UniswapX and CowSwap subsidize gas to attract users, but this is venture capital burn. The model fails at scale, forcing a shift of costs onto users or LPs.
- $100M+ in annualized gas subsidies.
- Creates a winner-take-most market for deep-pocketed sequencers.
- Subsidies mask the true cost of settlement, distorting price discovery.
The MEV Backstop Illusion
Protocols like Across and LayerZero rely on off-chain actors to absorb costs, expecting future MEV to compensate them. This creates systemic risk.
- $1B+ in liquidity provided based on future, uncertain revenue.
- Turns bridges and sequencers into implicit MEV auctions.
- A downturn in MEV profitability collapses the economic model.
Centralized Cost Sinks
Gas sponsorship concentrates power in a few entities (e.g., EigenLayer AVSs, AltLayer). The network's liveness depends on their continued willingness to burn capital.
- Creates single points of failure for entire application ecosystems.
- Incentivizes rent-seeking behavior as the dominant sponsor.
- Directly contradicts crypto's decentralization ethos.
Gas Sponsorship Models: A Comparative Autopsy
A breakdown of how different gas sponsorship models handle transaction costs, complexity, and security for end-users.
| Feature / Metric | Paymaster (ERC-4337) | Gasless Relay (GSN) | Intent-Based (UniswapX, Across) | Layer-2 Native (Base, Optimism) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Who Pays Gas? | Sponsor (dApp/Protocol) | Sponsor (Relayer Network) | Solver Network | Protocol Treasury / Sequencer |
User Needs Native Token? | ||||
Typical Sponsorship Fee | 0.3-1.0% of tx value | Fixed $0.10-$0.50 per tx | Bundled in swap quote (<0.5%) | 0% (subsidized by L2) |
Settlement Finality | On-chain (L1/L2) | On-chain (L1/L2) | Cross-chain via OFT (LayerZero) or AMB | On L2 chain (< 2 sec) |
Censorship Resistance | ||||
Max User Op Gas Limit | ~10M gas (configurable) | ~5M gas (relayer limit) | Solver-defined | Block gas limit (~30M gas) |
Primary Use Case | Onboarding, subscriptions | Simple dApp interactions | Cross-chain swaps & liquidity | Growth campaigns, airdrops |
Key Dependency | Bundler infrastructure | Relayer health & stake | Solver liquidity & competition | Sequencer subsidy budget |
The Paths to Sustainability
Embedded gas abstraction shifts the financial burden from end-users to applications, creating new revenue models and competitive dynamics.
The application subsidizes the gas. The embedded model inverts the traditional cost flow. Protocols like UniswapX or Base's Onchain Summer pay for user transactions to reduce friction. This creates a user acquisition cost line item, similar to web2 customer acquisition.
Sustainability requires monetization. Free gas is a loss leader. Applications must recoup costs via protocol fees, premium features, or data monetization. The model fails if the lifetime value (LTV) of an acquired user is less than the gas subsidy.
The wallet is disintermediated. In a user-pays model, wallets like MetaMask and Rainbow monetize via swap fees. Embedded abstraction removes this revenue stream, forcing wallets to become aggregators or service layers to capture value.
Evidence: Coinbase's Smart Wallet demonstrates this shift. It offers gasless transactions funded by the exchange, betting that onboarding users to its L2, Base, generates more value than the gas cost.
Protocols Building the Future
The embedded model shifts the cost burden from users to applications, creating new battlegrounds for subsidy, abstraction, and settlement.
The Problem: User Friction is a Growth Killer
Every new user must acquire native tokens, manage gas, and sign multiple transactions. This kills conversion. ~73% of DApp visitors bounce before their first transaction due to wallet complexity.
The Solution: Account Abstraction (ERC-4337)
Separates the signer from the payer. Apps can sponsor gas via Paymasters or use flexible signature schemes. This enables:
- Social logins & session keys for seamless UX
- Gasless onboarding where the app pays in stablecoins
- Batch transactions to amortize costs
The Subsidy War: Who Pays & Why?
Protocols like Particle Network and Biconomy compete to offer the cheapest gas sponsorship. The real cost is hidden from users, creating a B2B market for transaction liquidity. Winners capture user flow and data.
The Settlement Layer: Rollups & Appchains
Embedded models thrive on cheap, fast execution layers. Arbitrum, Optimism, and Polygon provide the low-cost blockspace. AltLayer and Caldera enable app-specific rollups where the app controls the entire fee market.
The Bundler Economy: MEV & Order Flow
Bundlers in ERC-4337 (like Stackup, Alchemy) execute user operations. They capture order flow and MEV opportunities, turning subsidized gas into a profitable business. This mirrors the Jito/Solana searcher-builder model.
The Endgame: Invisible Infrastructure
Gas becomes a B2B operational cost, like AWS bandwidth. Users never see it. The winning stack: AA wallet frontend -> subsidized Paymaster -> optimized Bundler -> cheap Appchain/L2. The user experience is indistinguishable from Web2.
Counterpoint: But What About...?
Embedded execution shifts the gas burden from the user to the application, creating new economic and technical trade-offs.
The user never pays gas. In an embedded model, the application or its relayer network sponsors transaction fees. This abstracts complexity but creates a new cost center for dApps, requiring sustainable monetization like meta-transaction fees or protocol revenue sharing.
Relayers become the new validators. The economic model shifts from user-tipped miners to application-subsidized executors. This centralizes fee market pressure onto a few entities, creating risks of censorship or downtime if relayers are underfunded or malicious.
Account abstraction enables this shift. Standards like ERC-4337 and EIP-7702 formalize the sponsor-pays model. Wallets like Safe{Wallet} and infrastructure from Stackup or Biconomy build the relay networks that batch and submit these sponsored transactions.
Evidence: On Arbitrum, applications using Gelato's relay service currently sponsor over 300,000 user transactions monthly. The cost is absorbed into their operational budget, proving the model works but highlighting its scalability dependency on L2 affordability.
Execution Risks & Pitfalls
Embedded transactions shift gas fee liability, creating new vectors for economic and operational failure.
The Subsidy Trap
Apps fronting gas to onboard users creates a non-scalable customer acquisition cost. This model implodes at scale, leading to either unsustainable treasury drain or a sudden, user-hostile shift to fee-charging.
- Hidden Burn Rate: A dApp with 1M daily users paying $0.10 in gas has a $100k daily burn.
- Venture Subsidy: This is often a temporary VC-funded illusion of 'free' transactions.
- Rugged Expectations: Users trained on free txs will churn when the real EVM gas market is revealed.
MEV Cannibalization
Bundlers and solvers in intent-based systems (UniswapX, CowSwap) capture the user's transaction surplus as profit. The 'gasless' experience is funded by selling your order flow and extracting your slippage.
- Opaque Pricing: The true cost is hidden in worse execution prices, not a clear fee.
- Solver Oligopoly: A few entities (e.g., Across, 1inch) control routing, creating centralization and rent-seeking risks.
- Regulatory Target: This is Payment for Order Flow (PFOF), crypto-style.
Liability for Failed Transactions
When the app pays, it eats the cost for reverts, frontrunning, and congestion spikes. This turns UX failures into direct P&L events, forcing apps to implement aggressive transaction filtering and risk models.
- Revert Bankruptcy: A buggy contract or exploit can drain the app's gas wallet via a flood of failing txs.
- Gas Price Volatility: A network spike (e.g., NFT mint) can make subsidized batch processing 10x more expensive mid-batch.
- Security vs. Cost Trade-off: Apps must choose between expensive private mempools (e.g., Flashbots Protect) or exposing users to MEV.
Wallet Abstraction's Centralized Relay
ERC-4337 Paymasters and Bundlers are new centralized choke points. To offer gasless txs, they must pay upfront, requiring trusted, capital-heavy relayers. This recreates the web2 dependency on Infura/Alchemy but for economic security.
- Censorship Vector: Relayers can refuse to process transactions for sanctioned addresses or competing apps.
- Capital Inefficiency: Locked capital in relayers earns zero yield, a significant opportunity cost.
- Single Point of Failure: If the dominant Paymaster (e.g., Stackup, Biconomy) goes down, gasless apps break.
The Interoperability Tax
Cross-chain embedded transactions via LayerZero, Axelar, or Wormhole multiply gas complexity. The app now subsidizes gas on multiple chains and assumes bridging risks, locking liquidity in remote gas wallets.
- Multi-Chain Gas Management: Requires active treasury management across 10+ EVM chains with different token standards.
- Bridge Slashing Risk: If the underlying message layer is exploited, the app's deposited gas funds can be stolen.
- Unpredictable Cost: Destination chain congestion makes the true cost of a 'gasless' cross-chain swap unknowable upfront.
Solution: User-Paid, App-Optimized
The sustainable model: users always pay base layer gas, but apps use advanced tooling to minimize the cost and complexity. This aligns incentives and removes app liability.
- Aggressive Bundling: Use Flashbots SUAVE or private RPCs to batch user ops and share savings.
- Gas Estimation Engines: Integrate Blocknative or GasNow-style oracles for accurate, real-time fee quotes.
- Sponsored Session Keys: Allow users to pre-approve a gas budget for a session, maintaining user-pay principle with smooth UX.
- Transparent Accounting: Show users the exact EVM gas cost vs. the app fee, building trust.
The 24-Month Outlook
The end-user will stop paying gas directly, shifting the cost and complexity to application developers and specialized infrastructure.
The end-user never pays gas. The winning model abstracts gas costs into the application's business logic. Users sign intents, not transactions, and the gas sponsor (app, relayer, or protocol) handles execution. This mirrors the web2 experience where AWS bills the company, not the user.
Gas becomes a B2B commodity. Applications will compete on who offers the best subsidized UX. The cost burden shifts from users to application treasuries and relayer networks like Biconomy and Gelato, who batch and optimize execution for scale.
The real cost is MEV protection. Simple gas sponsorship is table stakes. The premium service is intent-based routing that finds optimal execution across chains via protocols like UniswapX, CowSwap, and Across, minimizing slippage and front-running costs for the sponsor.
Evidence: Arbitrum's Account Abstraction transactions grew 10x in 2023. Protocols like Polygon and Base now natively support gas sponsorship, proving the model's viability for mainstream adoption.
TL;DR for Builders
Embedding transactions shifts the gas burden from users to applications, creating new competitive dynamics and technical requirements.
The Problem: User Abstraction is a Cost Center
Absorbing gas fees for users is a direct hit to unit economics. Without optimization, you're just subsidizing the base layer's inefficiencies.
- Unpredictable Costs: Volatile L1 gas and fluctuating L2 sequencer fees create budgeting nightmares.
- MEV Leakage: Naive subsidization lets arbitrage bots extract value from your sponsored transactions.
The Solution: Intent-Based Routing & Bundling
Don't just pay gas, orchestrate it. Use systems like UniswapX and Across to source liquidity and execution competitively.
- Cost Minimization: Route user intents to the cheapest, fastest executor via CowSwap solver network or LayerZero omnichain.
- MEV Capture/Redirection: Use private mempools (e.g., Flashbots SUAVE) to turn extracted value into user savings or protocol revenue.
The Architecture: Paymaster as a Strategic Layer
Your paymaster contract is not a wallet; it's a business logic hub for fee management and sponsorship policies.
- Session Keys: Enable gasless transactions for authenticated users with predefined limits, similar to ERC-4337 bundler services.
- Conditional Sponsorship: Only pay for successful txs or specific user actions (e.g., first trade, high-value deposit).
The Endgame: Gas as a Derivative Market
The future is hedging gas futures and trading fee volatility. Protocols like EigenLayer restakers could underwrite gas price insurance.
- Stable Fee Products: Offer users predictable costs by hedging exposure on derivatives platforms.
- Restaking Yield: Use pooled security (AVS) to collateralize gas guarantees, turning a cost into a yield-bearing asset.
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