Ted Hisokawa
Apr 03, 2026 12:17
Linea integrates EIP-7702, letting existing Ethereum wallets access smart contract features like transaction batching and session keys without changing addresses.
Linea has integrated EIP-7702 into its Layer 2 stack, enabling any existing Ethereum wallet to access smart contract functionality without deploying a new address or migrating funds. The upgrade eliminates a long-standing tradeoff that forced users to choose between simple private key accounts and feature-rich smart contract wallets.
The timing aligns with growing institutional interest in Linea. Sharplink deployed $200 million in ETH on the network in March 2026, while Uniswap launched its full DEX stack—v2, v3, and v4—on April 2nd, just one day before this announcement.
How It Works
EIP-7702 introduces a new transaction type that lets account holders sign an authorization pointing their wallet to a delegate contract. The network then executes that contract’s logic while preserving the original account’s storage and identity. Think of it as granting a limited power of attorney—revocable in a single transaction.
The practical applications are immediate. Users can batch token approvals and swaps into one transaction instead of two, cutting gas costs and eliminating approval pop-up fatigue. Third parties can sponsor gas fees entirely, meaning new users never need to hold ETH to start transacting. Session keys allow time-limited permissions for trading bots or recurring payments without exposing private keys.
Institutional Use Cases
For enterprises, the upgrade enables programmable compliance without custody changes. Hardware wallets can delegate specific daily swap limits to hot wallets. Multi-signature approval workflows run without separate smart contract deployments. Custody providers can extend smart account capabilities to existing client addresses that have already cleared compliance—no additional review required.
Delegation doesn’t transfer ownership. The original key holder retains full control with permissions scoped by amount, function, time window, or counterparty. All rules enforce onchain and remain publicly auditable.
Developer Impact
Because EIP-7702 maintains full compatibility with ERC-4337, Ethereum’s existing smart account standard, developers don’t need to choose between frameworks. They complement each other: ERC-4337 provides the infrastructure, and EIP-7702 makes it accessible to every wallet already in circulation.
Linea claims the upgrade enables Web2-style onboarding flows—no confusing multi-step prompts—while remaining entirely onchain and non-custodial. Native MetaMask integration means the network’s 30 million monthly active users get access without additional tooling.
What Comes Next
Linea is targeting full Type-1 EVM compatibility in 2026, which would mean complete equivalence with Ethereum’s execution environment. Future protocol upgrades aim to let accounts fully transition to smart account logic where root keys can be revoked entirely, enabling trustless multisig governance.
The LINEA token traded at $0.003 as of April 3rd, down 3.14% over 24 hours, with a market cap of $74.68 million. Whether EIP-7702 adoption drives network activity—and by extension, token burns through Linea’s dual-burn mechanism—depends on how quickly wallets and dApps implement the new transaction type.
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