
- The Base Azul upgrade went live on mainnet on May 13, 2026, marking Coinbase’s first fully independent Layer 2 network upgrade outside the Optimism Superchain upgrade cycle.
- The upgrade introduces a dual multiproof system combining trusted execution environment (TEE) and zero-knowledge (ZK) proofs, slashing withdrawal finality from 7 days to as little as 24 hours.
- Testnet results showed 5,000 TPS burst capacity and a 99% reduction in empty blocks, dropping from around 200 per day to just 2.
- A $250,000 Immunefi bug bounty competition ran through May 4, with internal and external audits completed on all onchain components ahead of the launch.
Base Azul upgrade is live. Coinbase’s Ethereum Layer 2 activated its first independent network upgrade today, and the headline number is hard to ignore: ETH withdrawal times just dropped from 7 days to 24 hours.
That change alone reshapes how users and developers think about moving assets between Base and Ethereum mainnet. Here’s what actually changed, and why it matters for everyone building onchain.
RT @buildonbase: Introducing Base Azul, our first independent network upgrade. Now live on Testnet with a targeted Mainnet release on May 13.
— Ethereum (@ethereum) April 21, 2026
What the Base Azul Upgrade Actually Does
The core of Azul is a multiproof system that pairs two distinct types of cryptographic verification: trusted execution environment (TEE) proofs and zero-knowledge (ZK) proofs. Either system can independently finalize a transaction proposal. When both agree, the withdrawal period collapses to one day.
This is a meaningful security upgrade, not just a speed improvement. In the event of a conflict between the two proof systems, the ZK proofs take priority as the permissionless option, overriding the permissioned TEE proofs automatically.
📊 99% Fewer Empty Blocks
Over the two months of testnet operation, empty block production fell from roughly 200 per day to just 2, according to Base’s official announcement.
5,000 TPS Bursts and a Unified Client Stack
Azul consolidates Base’s technical architecture. The network now runs exclusively on base-reth-node as its execution client, replacing several legacy clients including op-node and op-geth. A new consensus client called base-consensus, built on top of OP Kona, rounds out the stack.
Node operators who didn’t migrate before today’s mainnet activation will need to do so now. For regular users and most dApp developers, no action is required — the upgrade is transparent at the application layer, as TechToken’s crypto coverage has noted with previous L2 launches.
The @base Azul Audit Competition is live! ⚡️ A $250,000 scaling reward pool is up for grabs for finding bugs in the Base Azul, Base’s first independent upgrade. 📅 Ends May 4, 2026 💰 Scaling reward pool of $250,000 ⌨️ Language: Solidity & Rust ✅ KYC required Get hunting: https://t.co/h7LGTMtUtt
— Immunefi (@immunefi) April 21, 2026
Why This Is Base’s Most Significant Upgrade Yet
Until now, Base rolled upgrades in lockstep with Optimism’s Superchain, meaning Base couldn’t ship improvements on its own timeline. Azul changes that. It’s Base’s first fully independent network upgrade, and it signals that Coinbase’s L2 has the internal infrastructure to move fast without waiting for a coordinated multi-chain release.
The upgrade also aligns Base with Ethereum’s Osaka execution-layer specifications, including EIP-7825 (a per-transaction gas cap of roughly 17 million) and EIP-7939 (a new CLZ opcode for more efficient computation). Developers building high-throughput applications may need minor optimizations, but the broader ecosystem benefits immediately.
TechToken Take
Base cutting its withdrawal time from 7 days to 1 day is the kind of unglamorous technical work that actually drives L2 adoption. Retail users don’t think in terms of proof systems, they think in terms of “how long is my money stuck?” The answer is now 24 hours instead of a week. The bigger story is Coinbase demonstrating it can ship independently, which is the clearest sign yet that Base is moving from “Coinbase’s L2 project” to a genuinely self-sufficient network.
What Comes Next for Base
The roadmap after Azul is already set. By end of June, Base plans to ship an enshrined token standard, Flashblock Access Lists, and further reductions in withdrawal times. A native account abstraction upgrade is targeted for end of August, and Base Vibenet, a public developer testnet, is set to launch in mid-May.
With today’s Azul activation, Base enters its next phase as the most actively developed Ethereum L2 by transaction volume, and the clock on those follow-up upgrades has already started.










