Two dates, one bet. On June 9, Starknet flips the switch on testnet. On June 22, the v0.14.3 mainnet release is slated to go live with a new way to price gas. The move comes as STRK trades near recent lows and activity has thinned across parts of the ecosystem.
The headline change: a dynamic Layer‑2 base gas fee that references the market price of STRK. In plain terms, if the token moves, the base fee moves too—by design.
Can price‑indexed gas stabilize costs, re‑ignite usage, and win back attention before the mainnet date arrives? Here’s what matters now.
Starknet is pressing ahead with a fee model change as competition in Ethereum’s Layer‑2 landscape intensifies. The release cadence is tight: testnet on June 9 and mainnet on June 22, per rollout communications covered by KuCoin News. The goal is straightforward: reduce fee volatility for users and dapps by letting the protocol adjust the L2 base fee according to STRK’s market price, as reported in coverage of the StarkWare/X announcement by ChainCatcher.
Context is sobering. A DeFiLlama snapshot shows Starknet’s TVL around $179.45M and 24‑hour chain fees near $5,634 at the time of access, a modest take versus top L2s (DeFiLlama, accessed June 13, 2026). On the token side, CoinMarketCap lists STRK’s all‑time low on June 6, 2026 at $0.02972, with a recent price near $0.03412 and market cap around $216.84M (CoinMarketCap, accessed June 13, 2026). The upgrade lands at a pivotal moment.
According to coverage of the announcement, v0.14.3 introduces a dynamic Layer‑2 base fee that adjusts in response to STRK’s market price (ChainCatcher). The intended effect is to smooth out the fiat‑equivalent or ETH‑equivalent cost of transactions when the token moves. If STRK weakens, the base fee can adjust so users aren’t suddenly paying significantly more (or less) in real‑world terms for the same action. The precise tuning parameters and data inputs weren’t detailed in third‑party coverage, so observers should expect more color from StarkWare/Starknet engineering notes as mainnet approaches.
The team has set a tight deployment window:
This is less about a one‑day switch and more about an iterative path to a steadier fee curve.
Users care about two things at checkout: how much and how predictable. If gas is priced in the native token and that token is volatile, a static base fee can translate into uneven dollar costs over short windows. Indexing the L2 base fee to STRK’s price is meant to counter that, reducing the mismatch between what a transaction costs today versus tomorrow.
Where this helps most is at the margin: bridging small amounts, minting assets, claiming rewards. These are the actions users delay when fees whipsaw. Even a perception of stability can invite more routine usage.
Developers planning business models (and sequencer operators forecasting revenue) tend to think in fiat terms. Revenue predictability underpins budgeting, runway, and incentive designs. If base fees adapt to keep fiat‑equivalent pricing within guardrails, app teams can price features or reimbursements with more confidence. The same applies to sequencer revenue planning—although design details like update cadence and caps will determine how stable that revenue actually becomes.
There’s a second‑order effect, too: fewer “fee spikes” may help UX metrics such as conversion and retention. If a mint or swap doesn’t randomly cost 2x more than the day before, churn drops. Whether this shows up in the data depends on how tightly the base fee tracks price and how wallets surface the changes.
Most leading L2s price gas in ETH and rely on congestion‑based logic to update fees. Starknet’s shift is notable for explicitly tethering the Layer‑2 base fee to its native token’s market price. Here’s a high‑level comparison of approaches (not exhaustive):
Network Gas Denomination Base Fee Adjustment Signal Implications Starknet (v0.14.3) STRK Price‑indexed L2 base fee (per announcement coverage) Aims to stabilize fiat‑equivalent costs; introduces token‑market feedback loop Arbitrum One ETH Network demand–based Familiar UX for ETH users; no native‑token price reflexivity Optimism ETH Network demand–based Straightforward ETH denominated fees; predictable for multi‑chain wallets Base ETH Network demand–based ETH fees aligned with Coinbase ecosystem UX zkSync Era ETH Network demand–based ETH pricing avoids native token dependency for gas
The trade‑off is clear. ETH‑denominated gas keeps pricing independent from a project’s token but may drift in fiat terms with ETH’s own volatility. Token‑indexed gas can target steadier real‑world costs but requires careful guardrails to avoid reflexive stress if the token sells off or rallies hard.
Recent on‑chain tallies show a lean picture. A snapshot on DeFiLlama lists Starknet’s TVL at about $179.45M and 24‑hour chain fees near $5,634 (DeFiLlama, accessed June 13, 2026). That fee figure hints at a relatively light load versus busier L2s, which may make it easier to ship protocol‑level changes but also underscores the need to reignite demand.
As for STRK, the token printed its all‑time low on June 6, 2026 at $0.02972 with a recent reading near $0.03412 and market cap around $216.84M (CoinMarketCap, accessed June 13, 2026). That puts additional pressure on the upgrade to show tangible user benefits. If it works as intended, fee predictability could be a small but real catalyst for higher‑frequency actions (swaps, mints, claims) that compound into stickier activity. If not, the market may treat it as a cosmetic change.
Before mainnet, look for wallet and infrastructure readiness. Do leading wallets correctly surface estimated fees under fast‑moving STRK prices? Do dapps adapt hints and gas estimation logic smoothly? Early frictions here can negate the intended stability.
With testnet live first, the runway offers a clear checklist for anyone evaluating whether Starknet can claw back attention:
Crucially, the June 22 target remains a scheduled milestone, not a guarantee of instantaneous adoption. A handful of reliable wallets and a few prominent dapps championing v0.14.3 behavior could do more for perception than any single headline.
Indexing the base fee to STRK’s price aims to keep the fiat‑equivalent cost steady for a given unit of L2 gas. This can reduce the “sticker shock” users feel when the token slides or spikes. However, it also creates a coupling: violent token moves can prompt fee recalculations that either over‑ or under‑compensate, depending on the calibration of the mechanism.
Coverage did not specify the exact price data source or refresh schedule. Those choices matter. Faster updates track reality but risk oscillation; slower updates offer stability but can lag during market breaks. Expect the team to balance responsiveness against predictability and to fine‑tune after observing testnet behavior.
Token‑linked fees require clean wallet UX. If a user sees the fee estimate change twice in a minute with no explanation, trust erodes. Wallets that annotate “Base fee updated due to token price move” could turn a confusing moment into an understood one.
Swaps, mints, reward claims, micro‑payments—these “habit‑forming” actions are the first to respond to better fee predictability. If they tick up post‑upgrade, the effect can be compounding, especially if dapps nudge users with in‑app prompts when fees normalize.
For teams deciding where to deploy, a steadier fee environment can simplify business logic: fewer custom subsidies, cleaner fee estimation, tighter unit economics. Combine that with consistent sequencer behavior and you can make a pragmatic, non‑hype case for shipping on Starknet.
Aggregators and market makers optimize for predictable costs and settlement. If the dynamic base fee narrows variance on common paths, order flow can gradually tilt back. It may not be headline material, but consistent routing share is a heartbeat worth watching.
For continuing coverage and context across L2 ecosystems and token markets, Crypto Daily tracks rollup upgrades, liquidity flows, and security notes in one place. You can follow ongoing Starknet developments alongside competitors at Crypto Daily.
The release introduces a dynamic Layer‑2 base gas fee that adjusts based on STRK’s market price, per third‑party coverage of the StarkWare/X announcement (ChainCatcher). The aim is to reduce real‑world fee volatility for users and improve predictability for apps.
Coverage indicates a testnet rollout on June 9, 2026 and a mainnet deployment targeted for June 22, 2026 (KuCoin News), pending successful testing.
They may become more predictable in fiat terms, which users often experience as “cheaper” during token volatility. The mechanism is designed to stabilize costs, not to permanently lower them. Actual outcomes will depend on STRK’s price path and the calibration of the base‑fee updates.
The new mechanism references STRK’s price for the L2 base fee. Wallet prompts on mainnet will make the payment path clear; check official Starknet wallet guidance as the release lands to confirm how fees are collected for your specific flow.
After June 22, watch daily fees, tx counts, and liquidity metrics on dashboards like DeFiLlama. For token context, monitor STRK price and market cap on CoinMarketCap to see how markets digest post‑upgrade activity.
Uncovered bugs in testnet, wallet incompatibilities, or performance regressions could push timelines. The team appears to be using the testnet window to surface and fix issues before the June 22 mainnet target.
If the base fee keeps fiat‑equivalent costs steadier, sequencer revenue variability may narrow and dapps can budget reimbursements or incentives with more confidence. The magnitude of any effect will hinge on update cadence, caps, and real‑world usage after the upgrade.
Disclaimer: This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

