Boosty Labs has submitted a transaction-batching proposal to the CTDG Dev Hub, a move that could materially change how TRON processes payments and stablecoin flows. The proposal entered public review on 28 de nov. de 2025 and aims to anchor batching directly on the TRON mainnet, following the network’s 60% fee reduction implemented in agosto de 2025.
The proposal consolidates many individual transfers into a single on-chain settlement to reduce cost and increase throughput. Transaction batching is a method that groups multiple individual transfers into one consolidated transaction to save fees and blockchain overhead, and the submission outlines a four-step operational flow: collect and process transactions off‑chain; assemble them into a compressed batch with cryptographic proofs; transmit only the proven batch to the TRON mainnet; and record final settlement on-chain.
Cryptographic proofs are concise mathematical evidence that allow a verifier to confirm the integrity of compressed data without seeing every original item. The design purposefully avoids Layer 2 complexity by anchoring the process to the TRON mainnet, sidestepping cross‑chain bridges and their additional token or security requirements; Layer 2 solutions are secondary protocols intended to increase blockchain throughput by moving some activity off the base layer.
The proposal also specifies tiered pricing—“Instant”, “Delayed” and “Batch” and an automated system to flag high‑volume users for batch eligibility based on frequency and distribution patterns.
How batching works on TRON and the technical design
Estimated per‑recipient fees could fall to about 0,05 TRX inside batches, a level that would change unit economics for high‑frequency and high‑volume operations. TRON already hosts a dominant share of stablecoin flows, as the proposal notes that the network handles nearly half of global USDT in circulation, with some sources placing that share above 50%. For exchanges, payment processors and enterprises performing bulk payouts, a single batch fee instead of multiple individual fees materially reduces operating cost and can incentivize migration of large payment flows to TRON.
Validators and Super Representatives may see lower revenue per transaction, but the proposal expects higher aggregate volume and longer‑term earnings as adoption scales. The change could clear mainnet capacity for individual retail transfers by shifting bulk processing off‑chain, preserving low fees and faster settlement for ordinary users.
The batching proposal is presented as an infrastructural shift aimed at making TRON a more efficient settlement layer for enterprise payments and stablecoins while minimizing added protocol complexity.
