Pump.fun Co-Founder Says Fee Model Failed, Announces System Revamp
- Although there has been some increased trading activity in recent days, it is nowhere near what it was before.
- The update aims to address transparency issues that previously forced token holders to trust deployers to manually redirect fees to intended recipients.
- Alon explained that Dynamic Fees V1, launched months earlier, appeared initially successful, attracting creators who had never used crypto applications.
- The streaming meta that followed doubled platform activity, with bonding curve volumes surging 2x within weeks of the fee structure’s implementation.
What Happened
The admission comes as the Solana-based memecoin launcher faces mounting legal pressure and market-share erosion while attempting to balance creator incentives with trader participation.
The platform introduced its first changes through a fee-sharing feature that allows creators to distribute revenues among up to 10 wallets, transfer coin ownership, and revoke update authority.
Alon explained that Dynamic Fees V1, launched months earlier, appeared initially successful, attracting creators who had never used crypto applications.
“Only a week later, the potential of the mechanism showed: more and more creators—many of which have never touched a crypto app before—began organically launching coins and streaming on the platform,” he wrote.
The announcement drew sharp criticism from industry observers who questioned whether the changes addressed fundamental problems.
Unihax0r, a blockchain developer, dismissed the update as gaslighting, writing: “All this message to announce: nothing. The trenches need their Hyperliquid moment. We need a launchpad as a public good, where 99% of the value is redistributed to users.“
Unihax0r claimed that deployers use industrialized tools that launch thousands of tokens “in 2 clicks” while collecting substantial revenue with minimal effort, questioning why the platform “gives them the most upside” when “they NEED 10k deploys a day.“
Meanwhile, “Easy” from K9 Strategy compared the changes unfavorably to the Bags app, arguing that the fee reassignment feature would incentivize deployers to assign fees to unwilling recipients, creating pressure campaigns in which “a bunch of bag holders bother the ever living hell out of that person” to acknowledge tokens they never intended to launch.
Amid all these uncertainties brewing around the platform, a U.S. federal judge in December allowed plaintiffs to add nearly 5,000 internal chat messages to a class-action lawsuit accusing Pump.Fun, Jito Labs, and Solana Foundation entities are operating a coordinated enterprise that gave insiders priority access to newly launched tokens.
Market Context
Although there has been some increased trading activity in recent days, it is nowhere near what it was before.
Dynamic Fees Drew Creators But Discouraged Trading
The streaming meta that followed doubled platform activity, with bonding curve volumes surging 2x within weeks of the fee structure’s implementation.
However, the model created an imbalanced ecosystem by incentivizing low-risk coin creation over high-risk trading activity.
“Traders are the lifeblood of the platform,” Alon wrote, noting that successful tokens require environments where market participants provide liquidity, generate volume, and take risk.
He added that “creator fees may have skewed the incentive for users to engage in low-risk activity (coin creation) instead of high-risk activity (trading), which is dangerous.“
The new system will implement “a market-based approach, and let traders decide whether a narrative truly deserves Creator Fees, and how those should be used.”
Why It Matters
Alon acknowledged that creator fees “are a great tool to incentivize high-quality Project Tokens” but admitted the platform “fails at providing a good user experience” for narratives that could use fees to raise project ceilings.
Details
Pump.fun co-founder Alon acknowledged that the platform’s creator fee mechanism has failed to deliver sustainable results, prompting a major system overhaul that will let traders decide which tokens deserve revenue-sharing arrangements.
The update aims to address transparency issues that previously forced token holders to trust deployers to manually redirect fees to intended recipients.
He concluded on an optimistic note, stating that he is “extremely excited for what 2026 holds.”
Community Backlash Against Creator Fee Structure
He criticized Pump.fun for renaming taxes as creator fees, arguing that “people who deploys are not ‘creators’. They don’t create anything valuable, if anything it should be called Extractor fees.“
A user with the X name of “Patience” proposed a simpler solution: “creator fees to 0% until a coin hits 1m+ mc, charge like 3 to 5 SOL to deploy a coin = problem solved.“
Growing Legal Troubles and Treasury Controversy