Near Protocol to automate growth with dynamic resharding upgrade in June, NEAR token surges 27%

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Near Protocol just solved one of blockchain’s most annoying scaling problems: the part where humans have to manually intervene every time the network needs more room. The project announced dynamic resharding, an upgrade arriving in June 2026 that lets the network automatically spin up new shards whenever existing ones get too full.

The market’s reaction was immediate. NEAR’s native token surged roughly 27% to 30% within 24 hours, trading around $2.24 to $2.27 and making it one of the best-performing large-cap tokens in the period.

What dynamic resharding actually does

Think of shards like lanes on a highway. When traffic backs up, you need more lanes. Until now, adding lanes on Near required validators to coordinate manually, hold votes, and wait through governance processes. It worked, but it was slow. Dynamic resharding is the equivalent of lanes appearing automatically the moment congestion hits a threshold.

In technical terms, the upgrade, arriving as part of network upgrade 2.13, monitors the state size of each shard. When a shard crosses a predetermined capacity limit, the protocol splits it without requiring any human coordination or prolonged voting periods.

This is the latest step in Near’s Nightshade sharding architecture, which has been rolling out in phases since 2021. The shard count already increased from 6 to 8 in March 2025, then climbed to 9 later that year. With dynamic resharding in place, the network’s long-term projections envision scaling beyond 70 shards, which would push transaction throughput past Visa-level capacity.

Here’s the thing: most Layer 1 blockchains talk about infinite scalability as a destination. Near is building it as a self-managing process. The difference matters because manual shard management creates bottlenecks at exactly the moments when networks need to scale fastest, during demand spikes.

Post-quantum security and the bigger picture

The June upgrade isn’t just about scaling. It also introduces post-quantum-safe signing, a cryptographic upgrade designed to protect the network against future quantum computing threats.

Quantum computers capable of breaking current encryption standards don’t exist yet. But the blockchain industry has started treating quantum readiness less like science fiction and more like infrastructure planning. Near is positioning itself among the first major Layer 1s to bake quantum-resistant signatures directly into its protocol layer.

The dual focus on automatic scaling and quantum security signals where Near sees its competitive moat forming. The protocol has been leaning heavily into AI-adjacent use cases through its NEAR Intents infrastructure, which facilitates cross-chain transactions and is designed to handle the high-frequency, data-heavy workloads that AI-driven applications tend to generate.

Automatic shard creation is particularly relevant for AI workloads because they’re inherently unpredictable. An AI agent that suddenly needs to process thousands of on-chain transactions doesn’t have time to wait for a governance vote to add network capacity.

What this means for investors

The 27% to 30% price spike tells a clear story about market sentiment. Traders are treating dynamic resharding as a genuine competitive differentiator, not just another roadmap bullet point. The move made NEAR a standout among large-cap tokens in a market that hasn’t exactly been throwing around 30% daily gains.

Institutional interest appears to be building in parallel. Bitwise offers a Near Staking ETP, which provides a regulated vehicle for institutional capital to flow into the NEAR ecosystem. Sustained inflows into products like this ahead of a major technical upgrade could create a feedback loop: better fundamentals attract institutional money, which drives price, which attracts more attention to the fundamentals.

The competitive landscape is worth watching closely. Ethereum’s sharding roadmap has been repeatedly delayed and restructured. Solana takes a monolithic approach, opting for raw hardware performance over sharding entirely. Near’s bet is that automated, modular scaling will prove more resilient than either strategy as blockchain workloads grow more complex and less predictable.

The risk, as always with pre-upgrade price moves, is that the market has already priced in success. If dynamic resharding encounters bugs during testnet or faces delays beyond June, that 27% gain could unwind quickly. Traders who bought the announcement will need the execution to match the ambition.

Look, the broader question here isn’t whether Near can add more shards. It’s whether automatic scaling becomes the standard that other Layer 1s have to match. If dynamic resharding works as advertised, every blockchain that still requires manual capacity planning will suddenly look a generation behind. That competitive pressure alone could reshape how investors evaluate Layer 1 infrastructure bets through the rest of 2026.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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