Ethereum has long used a transaction model in which users pay their own gas. When initiating an on-chain transaction, users need to prepare ETH in advance for fees and dynamically adjust their gas bids based on network congestion. While this mechanism ensures that network resources can be allocated through a market-based approach, it also raises the barrier to entry for ordinary users entering Web3.
As on-chain applications move toward broader adoption and realtime interaction, complex gas management processes are beginning to affect the user experience. The Gas Abstraction direction proposed by ETHGas is an infrastructure design focused on reducing the complexity of on-chain interactions. Through Open Gas, Account Abstraction, and realtime execution mechanisms, ETHGas aims to make Ethereum interactions feel closer to traditional internet applications and support the development of a more gasless experience.
Gas Abstraction is an infrastructure mechanism designed to reduce the complexity users face when directly managing on-chain transaction fees.
In the traditional Ethereum network, users usually need to:
Hold ETH to pay gas
Set transaction fees manually
Manage gas assets across different chains
Adjust transaction parameters based on network congestion
For ordinary users, this process has a learning curve and may also affect the experience of using on-chain applications.
The core goal of Gas Abstraction is to hide complex gas management logic within the infrastructure layer, allowing users to complete on-chain interactions more naturally. Under a Gas Abstraction mechanism, users do not necessarily need to hold ETH directly or frequently pay attention to gas parameter adjustments. Some complex processes can be completed automatically by wallets, applications, or the protocol layer.
Ethereum’s open gas market helps ensure efficient resource allocation, but it also brings a high level of usage complexity.
For users encountering Web3 for the first time, gas is often one of the easiest concepts to misunderstand. For example:
Why does a transaction require ETH?
Why do transaction fees suddenly rise?
Why do different chains require different gas tokens?
Why does a transaction fail because of insufficient gas?
These questions are all fundamentally related to the underlying gas management mechanism.
As Web3 applications gradually expand to a larger user base, the industry has begun to recognize that complex gas interactions may slow the adoption of on-chain applications. As a result, more infrastructure projects are exploring the direction of a “gasless” user experience.
ETHGas’s Gas Abstraction mechanism is one of the realtime Ethereum infrastructure solutions proposed in this context.
ETHGas’s gasless experience is mainly built around Open Gas, realtime blockspace coordination, and Account Abstraction.
Compared with the traditional Ethereum model, which relies on users paying their own gas, ETHGas places more emphasis on having the application layer, wallet layer, or protocol layer automatically handle fee logic.
In some scenarios:
Applications can pay gas on behalf of users
Users do not need to hold ETH separately
Wallets can automatically optimize fee paths
Multi-chain transaction flows can be coordinated in a unified way
This model reduces the user’s direct awareness of the underlying gas mechanism, which is why it is described as a “gasless” experience.
Through infrastructure optimization, ETHGas aims to make on-chain interactions feel closer to the “background processing” model common in Web2 applications.
Open Gas is one of the infrastructure directions proposed by ETHGas. Its goal is to make gas usage and payment methods more flexible.
The traditional Ethereum network usually requires users to pay gas in ETH, while Open Gas places greater emphasis on:
More flexible transaction fee payment methods
Application-layer gas coordination
Automated handling on the user side
Realtime fee optimization
This model means that gas management logic can gradually shift from “manual user operation” to “automatic protocol coordination.”
The emergence of Open Gas is also connected to Ethereum’s Account Abstraction ecosystem.
Account Abstraction, or AA, is one of the important development directions in Ethereum infrastructure. Its core goal is to give wallets more flexible execution logic.
Traditional Ethereum accounts usually rely on fixed signature and gas payment models, while Account Abstraction allows wallets to:
Customize transaction verification logic
Automatically handle transaction fees
Support batched transactions
Support social recovery
Support application-layer gas sponsorship
ETHGas’s Gas Abstraction direction is closely related to Account Abstraction.
Both aim to reduce the complexity users face when managing on-chain operations and improve the usability of Ethereum applications. ETHGas focuses more on realtime blockspace and execution coordination, while Account Abstraction is more centered on the wallet layer and account execution logic.
As Ethereum infrastructure continues to become more modular, these two directions may become more closely integrated.
A gasless user experience could change how future Web3 applications work.
In the traditional model, users need to understand wallets, gas, on-chain confirmations, and transaction fee logic. Under a Gas Abstraction system, complex operations can be hidden inside the background infrastructure.
This shift may bring the following effects:
Lowering the barrier to Web3 adoption
Improving the user experience of on-chain applications
Reducing the complexity of multi-chain interactions
Improving realtime application execution efficiency
Encouraging Web2 users to enter on-chain ecosystems
For blockchain games, social applications, and consumer-facing applications, a gasless experience is especially important because these scenarios usually depend more heavily on smooth interactions.
Although Gas Abstraction can improve the user experience, its implementation also involves certain challenges.
First, a gasless experience means more logic needs to be handled by the protocol layer or application layer, which may increase infrastructure complexity.
Second, application-sponsored gas requires new incentive and cost management mechanisms. If transaction fee management is unreasonable, it may affect the long-term sustainability of the protocol.
In addition, realtime gas coordination and multi-chain payment paths may also introduce compatibility and security issues.
For ETHGas, how to improve the user experience while preserving Ethereum’s openness and security remains one of the important questions for the Gas Abstraction direction.
Gas Abstraction is an infrastructure mechanism designed to reduce the complexity of on-chain interactions. Its core goal is to let users complete transactions without directly managing gas.
Through designs such as Open Gas, Account Abstraction, and realtime blockspace coordination, ETHGas explores an Ethereum interaction experience that feels closer to Web2. As realtime on-chain applications and consumer-grade Web3 products grow, the gasless experience is becoming an important part of next-generation Ethereum infrastructure.
ETHGas enables a more automated gas management experience through mechanisms such as Open Gas, Account Abstraction, and realtime blockspace coordination.
In some Gas Abstraction scenarios, users do not necessarily need to hold ETH directly. Applications or protocols can handle transaction fees on their behalf.
Traditional Ethereum mainly relies on users paying ETH gas themselves, while Open Gas places greater emphasis on flexible payment and automated coordination.
Both aim to reduce the complexity of on-chain interactions. Account Abstraction focuses more on wallet execution logic, while Gas Abstraction focuses more on the transaction fee management experience.
Gas Abstraction mainly optimizes the user experience and does not directly change Ethereum mainnet consensus, but the related infrastructure still needs to balance efficiency and security.





