The Cardano Van Rossem hard fork reached a mainnet go/no-go decision point on June 15, 2026. This is the most important day in the protocol’s Voltaire governance era, with network readiness metrics running much faster than previous upgrades and official results expected to be imminent.
Simply put, node adoption is strong enough to warrant a green light, but the decision itself must clear a community-managed process that has never activated a mainnet hard fork before.
This major decision regarding Cardano’s future comes after ADA fell by -1% overnight, becoming one of the few digital assets to lose money in the past 24 hours, highlighting the uncertainty that pervades the entire community.
$ADA 5 waves followed by ABC remains king
is the current probability
From here it will be -56% (macro only)
But here’s the problem…
ALTS does not all act together
Even if Cardano goes down, not all coins will go down.
That’s a big misconception about CT
Patience… pic.twitter.com/jmtP71q3LJ
— Norris Digital Asset (@AssetsNorris) June 15, 2026
Van Rossem hard fork in action
Van Rossem’s hard fork is Cardano’s transition to protocol version 11, which is technically an in-era upgrade. That means changing the functionality and governance parameters of a protocol without launching a whole new ledger era, like Shelley or Basho did. Think of this less as an engine rebuild and more as an upgrade to the control system that governs who can touch the engine in the future.
Importantly, this is the first hard fork in Cardano’s history that was initiated through Voltaire’s on-chain governance framework, rather than IOG acting unilaterally. Under the Voltaire administration, DReps (Delegated Representatives) hold voting rights proportional to the stake of the ADA to which they are delegated, and a constitutional committee must approve governance measures before they reach the mainnet.
The Van Rossem upgrade also updates the Plutus cost model, the pricing schedule that determines the computational cost of each smart contract operation on-chain. According to Intersect’s June 12 update, the governance measure was introduced on May 26, received approximately 55% approval, and is expected to be ratified in the coming weeks.
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How ready is the Cardano network now?
Preparations for June 15 were significantly better than in any previous decision period. According to PoolTool, 52% of nodes are self-reporting protocol version 11. Cexplorer has a higher block generation share. 84% of blocks created in the five days ending June 12th came from v11 nodes, and 76% of block creation in the current mainnet epoch was performed on protocol version 11.
These are not the same metrics. The number of nodes and block generation weights vary as larger and more active stake pools tend to upgrade faster. But both are facing the same direction. Intersect described the readiness of the exchange as “rapidly improving.”
Several light wallets have achieved full ready status, and the CPU overutilization issue flagged by the Indigo protocol was found to be due to an older version of the Lucid library that uses hard-coded values, rather than a flaw in the node or hard fork itself. No underlying protocol issues were identified.
For teams running infrastructure, there are two supported compatibility paths. The Intersect managed forks of Ogmios (v6.14.0.2) and Kupo (v2.11.0.1) are both managed by IOG and will continue to be fully supported until an upstream compatible release is completed.
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The human story behind the name “Van Rossem”
Binance and Coinbase are both currently showing Cardano’s Van Rossem hard fork upgrade as ongoing.
This is another clear sign that the broader exchange infrastructure is preparing for an upgrade.
Exchange Readiness Completed is reported as 20.69%
Preparations for Exchange are underway… pic.twitter.com/T7mKpK8Svi— Dave (@ItsDave_ADA) June 15, 2026
This upgrade has a name that distinguishes it from all previous Cardano hard forks. Max van Rossem was a governance contributor at Cardano who passed away on January 11, 2026. On the same day his son, Max Louis Hans van Rossem, was born.
The naming was not ceremonial. In January and February 2026, Intersect conducted an on-chain DRep naming vote for protocol version 11. Support exceeded 80% of DRep’s effective shares, making it one of the most decisive governance votes the network has ever recorded.
As Intersect wrote in a June 12 update, “He will grow up in a world where the blockchain his father helped form carries his family name. This hard fork is named not for a product or protocol milestone, but for a man who dedicated his time, mind, and heart to the decentralized future he believed in.”
The vote itself was a proof of concept for the Cardano governance system, where Van Rossem’s upgrade is designed to strengthen community-driven decisions instead of founder-driven ones.
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The post Cardano Van Rossem Hard Fork Hits After Decision Day appeared first on 99Bitcoins.
