Ethereum (ETH) stands out not just for powering decentralized finance (DeFi) and smart contracts, but also for its unique economic model. A major part of this model revolves around the Ethereum burn address — a special address where ETH is sent to be permanently removed from circulation. This mechanism, which was introduced via EIP-1559, reshaped how fees are processed on the network and how Ethereum manages its supply.
This article will unpack what the ETH burn address is, how it works, why it matters, and how users interact with it.
At its core, the Ethereum burn address is a wallet address that is intentionally inaccessible — meaning no one has the private key to it. Any ETH sent to this address is irretrievably lost and permanently removed from the circulating supply. By sending ETH to an address that no one can control, the network ensures those tokens can never be spent again.
There are two common burn addresses in the Ethereum ecosystem:
Zero Address: 0x0000000000000000000000000000000000000000 — sometimes used in protocol-level burns and default EVM logic.
Dead Address: 0x000000000000000000000000000000000000dEaD — a community-recognized “dead” address often used by projects to burn tokens publicly.
Both serve the same purpose — to make the burned ETH permanently unspendable. The key difference is that the dead address is more human-readable and transparent, while the zero address has protocol-level functions within the Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM).
Ether burnt every day (Source: Etherscan)
The most significant change to Ethereum’s fee structure came with Ethereum Improvement Proposal 1559 (EIP-1559), which was implemented during the London Hard Fork in August of 2021. Before EIP-1559, transaction fees were unpredictable and all fees went to miners. EIP-1559 introduced a new system that:
Splits transaction fees into two parts — a base fee and a priority fee (tip).
Burns the base fee, permanently removing it from circulation.
Sends the priority fee to validators (previously miners) as an incentive.
The base fee varies dynamically based on network demand and congestion. When network activity is high, the base fee increases; when it’s low, it decreases. Every time a transaction is confirmed, the corresponding base fee is sent to the burn address, effectively lowering the ETH supply over time.
While EIP-1559 handles the protocol-level burning of ETH, other entities in the Ethereum ecosystem — such as DeFi projects — may also burn tokens by sending them to the burn address as part of their tokenomics strategy. Some projects will buy back tokens from the market and then burn them to reduce supply and support token value.
(Source: TastyCrypto)
Burning ETH reduces the total amount in circulation — a concept similar to removing cash out of an economy. Less supply, with steady or increasing demand, can create deflationary pressure, potentially supporting higher value for remaining tokens.
By burning the base fee, Ethereum’s fee market becomes more predictable and fair. Users no longer have to bid unpredictable gas prices to get transactions included. The base fee is algorithmically determined and burned, improving user experience.
EIP-1559’s burn mechanism changes Ethereum’s monetary policy from inflationary to one that can be deflationary or neutral, depending on network activity. Some periods have seen more ETH burned than issued to validators, a milestone for “ultra-sound money” advocates.
The burn address is not something users interact with directly on a daily basis, but its effects are far-reaching:
Transaction fees: Every time you send ETH or interact with a smart contract, part of your fee is burned automatically.
DeFi tokenomics: Some decentralized applications and tokens include burn features to reduce supply as part of their economic model.
Network monitioring: Users can track how much ETH is burned over time using blockchain explorers and analytics dashboards to gauge market conditions and network demand.
The burn mechanism has made Ethereum’s economics more sophisticated. In fact, billions of dollars worth of ETH have been burned since EIP-1559 launched, proving how network activity directly ties to monetary policy. While burning creates scarcity, it doesn’t guarantee price increases — demand, broader market conditions, and utility still play major roles.
It’s a special wallet address with no private key where ETH is sent to be permanently removed from circulation, making it impossible to retrieve.
ETH is burned as part of the EIP-1559 fee mechanism to reduce supply, stabilize fees, and improve monetary policy.
Burning ETH can create scarcity, which might support value over time, but price still depends on demand and market conditions.
No. Users can choose the priority fee (tip), but the base fee that gets burned is automatically calculated by the protocol.
There are analytics tools and dashboards (e.g., ultrasound.money, blockchain explorers) that show live and historical ETH burn data.

