Boosty Labs proposes introducing native transaction batching on Tron
Boosty Labs, a blockchain infrastructure developer, has put forward a detailed design for a Tron Settlement Batching Layer.
The proposal went live on the CTDG Dev Hub on Nov. 14, opening it up for public review from validators, developers, and community members.
The proposal focuses on a simple idea with major implications: grouping many transactions into a single on-chain submission.
The method reduces the load on the mainnet, lowers fees for high-volume users, and helps Tron scale as more enterprises rely on it for stablecoin transfers.
This makes the proposal both timely and strategically important, given Tron’s dominant role in global USDT circulation.
If approved, the design will be rolled out in phases, starting with testnet deployment of the settlement contract and fee module, followed by security audits, integration of aggregator nodes, and a public verification library, before reaching the mainnet after community approval.
How batching is expected to work
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The design introduces an off-chain processing layer that collects, verifies, and compresses transactions before committing them on-chain.
It keeps all settlements tied directly to the Tron mainnet without new bridges, separate chains, or new tokens.
That approach gives it an edge over traditional Layer-2 models that depend on external infrastructure.
Transactions are gathered off-chain until they reach a certain threshold. They are then verified and turned into a single batch with cryptographic proofs.
Only that batch is submitted to the blockchain, which validates the proof and finalises the settlement.
The process reduces repeated work on the mainnet, allowing it to operate more efficiently while handling a greater volume of economic activity.
To accommodate different user needs, Boosty Labs proposes three fee tiers based on urgency. Instant mode provides immediate settlement at a premium rate.
Delayed mode offers moderate waiting times at standard prices.
Batch mode is designed for exchanges, payment processors, and other heavy-volume users that can wait for the next batch in exchange for major fee savings.
Targeting high-volume actors
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A key part of the proposal is an automated system that identifies users who stand to benefit most from batching.
It evaluates transaction frequency, transfer size, and distribution patterns to determine batch eligibility.
Accounts that process more than 50 stablecoin transfers per day, move amounts above $10,000 regularly, or distribute funds to more than 25 recipients per week could be added to a whitelist managed by a smart contract.
The proposal aims to reduce fees to about 0.05 TRX per recipient in batches.
For exchanges and enterprise platforms that send thousands of transfers daily, the savings could be substantial.
Why it matters for Tron
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Tron is already home to more than half of the world’s circulating USDT supply.
Its network has become a preferred settlement layer for exchanges, payment processors, and users looking for predictable, low-cost transfers.
Native batching strengthens that position by cutting unnecessary on-chain load and smoothing out network activity.
This means heavy-volume users gain operational efficiency, validators enjoy a more scalable system in the long run, and everyday users see more consistent fees.
For Tron itself, batching opens the door to higher transaction throughput without changing the underlying consensus model.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
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