Uniswap governance has approved the Unification proposal with overwhelming support, marking one of the most significant protocol‑level changes in Uniswap’s history. The decision sets in motion a series of coordinated upgrades, including a 100 million UNI token burn, activation of protocol fee switches, and the removal of frontend fees after a two‑day timelock.
The passed proposal authorizes several major changes:
Uniswap governance portal:
https://gov.uniswap.org/
The Unification proposal resolves long‑standing debates around value accrual in Uniswap. Until now, most economic benefits flowed to liquidity providers, while UNI functioned primarily as a governance token. Activating the fee switch shifts Uniswap closer to a protocol‑revenue model.
Combined with a large token burn, the changes introduce both supply reduction and cash‑flow potential into UNI’s long‑term economics.
Uniswap’s fee switch has existed in code for years but remained inactive due to governance and regulatory considerations. Its activation signals:
Protocol fees can now be directed according to governance decisions, including treasury growth, ecosystem funding, or potential distributions.
By eliminating frontend fees, Uniswap improves its position against competing DEXs and aggregators. This move prioritizes volume growth and liquidity depth, potentially offsetting fee reductions through increased usage and protocol‑level capture.
The combination of a major token burn, revenue activation, and UX improvements is rare in DeFi governance. Analysts view the vote as a signal that Uniswap is transitioning from a pure infrastructure layer into a cash‑flow‑generating protocol with clearer tokenholder alignment.
That said, the real impact will depend on:
After the 2‑day timelock, execution of the approved changes will begin. Market participants will be watching closely for:
The passage of Uniswap’s Unification proposal represents a turning point for UNI. With 100M tokens burned, fee switches finally activated, and frontend fees removed, Uniswap has moved decisively toward sustainable protocol economics.
Governance has spoken—and now execution begins.

