Ethereumβs First ZK-Rollup ZKsync Lite to Shut Down in 2026
ZKsync has announced plans to deprecate ZKsync Lite, Ethereumβs first zero-knowledge rollup, in 2026 as the protocol shifts its focus entirely toward the ZKsync network and ZK Stack-powered chains.
The original Layer 2 solution, which launched in December 2020 as a groundbreaking proof-of-concept, will undergo an orderly sunset after serving its purpose of validating critical ideas for production ZK systems.
No immediate action is required from users, as ZKsync Lite continues to operate normally, with funds remaining secure and withdrawals to Ethereumβs Layer 1 functioning throughout the deprecation process.
The ZKsync Association will share detailed migration guidance, specific dates, and a comprehensive deprecation plan in the coming year.
β ZKsync (@zksync) December 7, 2025
In 2026, we plan to deprecate ZKsync Lite (aka ZKsync 1.0), the original ZK-rollup we launched on Ethereum.
This is a planned, orderly sunset for a system that has served its purpose and does not affect any other ZKsync systems.
From Pioneer to Legacy System
ZKsync Lite emerged as the first zero-knowledge rollup on Ethereum, pioneering technology that would later evolve into ZKsync Era and the Elastic Network.
The protocol addressed Ethereumβs fundamental challenges of high transaction fees and slow transaction processing by executing transactions off-chain and submitting cryptographic proofs of validity back to Layer 1.
The project gained significant momentum in November 2025 when Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin publicly endorsed ZKsync following its Atlas upgrade, describing the work as βunderrated and valuable.β
ZKsync has been doing a lot of underrated and valuable work in the ethereum ecosystem. Excited to see this come from them! https://t.co/coZKCfsb8h
β vitalik.eth (@VitalikButerin) November 1, 2025
His backing catalyzed institutional adoption, triggering a 50% surge in ZK token prices while positioning ZKsync as central to Ethereumβs βLean Ethereumβ scaling strategy.
ZKsync evolved from its initial Lite version to ZKsync Era in March 2023, becoming the first publicly available zkEVM.
The June 2024 ZKsync 3.0 upgrade transformed the ecosystem from a single Layer 2 into the Elastic Network, an interconnected system of autonomous ZK chains sharing liquidity and security through cryptographic proofs rather than traditional bridges.
Institutional Traction Validates ZK Technology
While ZKsync Lite phases out, the broader ZKsync ecosystem has attracted major institutional interest.
Deutsche Bank is developing an Ethereum Layer 2 blockchain using ZKsync technology as part of Project Dama 2, which involves 24 financial institutions testing the blockchain for asset tokenization under Singaporeβs regulatory sandbox.
UBS also conducted a proof-of-concept for its Key4 Gold product using ZKsync Validium, testing the platformβs ability to support tokenized gold investments with privacy and scalability.
Tradable has also tokenized $2.1 billion in institutional-grade private credit on ZKsync, accounting for nearly 90% of the networkβs market share for real-world asset protocols.

The Ethereum Foundation launched βEthereum for Institutionsβ in October 2024, providing enterprises with structured pathways to blockchain adoption using zero-knowledge proofs, fully homomorphic encryption, and trusted execution environments.
Projects like Chainlink, RAILGUN, and Aztec Network pioneer privacy-preserving smart contracts that secure counterparty information while maintaining transparency.
Security Incidents Test Platform Resilience
The deprecation announcement follows two significant security breaches in 2025 involving ZKsyncβs protocols.
In April, an attacker exploited admin access to the airdrop distribution contract, minting 111 million unclaimed ZK tokens worth approximately $5 million during the protocolβs token distribution to ecosystem participants.
The hacker agreed to return 90% of the stolen assets in exchange for a 10% bounty, transferring nearly $5.7 million back to the ZKsync Security Council within the designated 72-hour safe harbor window.
The recovered amount exceeded the original stolen value due to token price increases, with ZK gaining 16.6% and ETH rising 8.8% following the incident.
β Cryptonews.com (@cryptonews) April 24, 2025
The @TheZKNation has recovered $5 million worth of stolen tokens following a security breach on April 15.#ZKsync #Hackhttps://t.co/sb7iC0RqoR
Just one month later, hackers compromised the official X accounts of ZKsync and Matter Labs, spreading false regulatory warnings claiming SEC investigations and Treasury Department sanctions.
The attackers also published phishing links promoting a fake ZK token airdrop designed to drain usersβ wallets, causing the token price to drop approximately 5% despite a prior 38.5% weekly rally.
The breach occurred through compromised delegated accounts with limited posting privileges, which have since been disconnected.
These back-to-back incidents contributed to broader industry concerns, as crypto hacks resulted in $1.6 billion in losses during the first quarter of 2025 alone. The quarter was among the worst for crypto security breaches in history.
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In 2026, we plan to deprecate ZKsync Lite (aka ZKsync 1.0), the original ZK-rollup we launched on Ethereum.
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