BNB Smart Chain Sets Fermi Hard Fork for January 14

  • Fermi hard fork goes live Jan 14, 2026, requiring validators to upgrade to v1.6.4 or v1.6.5 to stay active.

  • Block time drops from 750ms to 250ms, boosting speed for DeFi, trading and other time-sensitive applications.

  • New consensus tuning and lighter indexing reduce coordination strain and node costs as blocks arrive faster.

BNB Smart Chain will activate the Fermi hard fork on January 14, 2026, at 02:30 AM UTC on mainnet. The network-wide upgrade affects validators, builders, and node operators. It follows roughly two months of testing and aims to reduce block intervals to support faster confirmations for time-sensitive applications.

Activation Timing and Validator Requirements

The Fermi hard fork activates at a fixed block time across the BSC mainnet. According to BNB community documentation, all validators and builders must upgrade before activation. The supported releases are v1.6.4 and v1.6.5, and both remain compatible once the upgrade goes live.

However, the BSC team recommends version 1.6.5 for node operators. That release includes performance improvements tailored for faster block production. Validators who fail to upgrade risk losing block production rights and validation participation.

Notably, version 1.6.5 introduces an optional cap on transaction gas fees. This feature allows validators to manage fees during congestion. It also helps limit sharp fee increases as blocks arrive faster.

The upgrade removes the handshake mechanism from the protocol. According to BSC documentation, simpler peer connections reduce communication overhead. This change supports network stability under shorter block intervals.

Shorter Block Times and Consensus Adjustments

The core change cuts block time from 750 milliseconds to 250 milliseconds. According to the BNB community GitHub, the update targets applications requiring sub-second confirmations. These include certain DeFi strategies, trading systems, and liquidation processes.

However, faster blocks increase coordination demands among validators. To address this, Fermi adds extended voting parameters across the validator set. These adjustments account for communication delays at higher block frequencies.

According to documentation, the changes help preserve consensus stability as confirmation windows shrink. This becomes important when blocks arrive more frequently. Block time directly affects trade execution and update accuracy during busy periods.

Indexing Updates and Network Performance Context

Alongside block changes, Fermi introduces a new indexing approach. According to BNB Chain documentation, nodes can access specific data without syncing full history. This reduces storage and computing requirements.

As a result, analytics providers and node operators can run lighter infrastructure. Lower resource demands also support broader network participation. The change improves efficiency without altering core network design.

According to BscScan, BNB Chain processes about 222 transactions per second in practice. Chainspect places its theoretical maximum at 6,349 TPS. Nansen reports active addresses near 2.9 million.

BNB Smart Chain launched in 2020 under a validator-based model. Previous upgrades, including Maxwell and Lorentz, reduced block times incrementally. Fermi builds on those changes ahead of its January 14 activation.

BNB1,99%
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