TLDR:
- ether.fi ran 70,000 active cards and 300,000 accounts uninterrupted during a full live chain migration.
- Separating card payment accounting from onchain settlement was the architectural decision that made zero downtime possible.
- Gnosis Safe’s deterministic deployment eliminated address reconciliation — a common blocker in cross-chain moves.
- Since closing the migration, TVL has surged from $220M to $347M, signaling strong post-migration confidence.
ether.fi completed a full migration to OP Mainnet on April 15, moving $220M in total value locked across chains in three days.
The platform ran 70,000 active cards and 300,000 accounts throughout the process without a single migration-related card decline.
No maintenance window was announced. No customers were notified. The infrastructure underneath millions of dollars in daily payments changed quietly while transactions kept processing.
The Architecture Behind a Live Migration
The migration began with ether.fi’s Scroll deployment staying fully operational. The OP Mainnet environment was built alongside it, not as a replacement ready to flip on, but as a parallel system coming online gradually.
Core contracts deployed first on OP Mainnet, mirroring the exact ownership configuration running on Scroll. New users were provisioned directly onto OP Mainnet during the build phase.
Three assets moved through bridges in stages. USDC, USDT, and WETH each traveled from Scroll to Ethereum before taking separate paths to OP Mainnet.
Every other asset migrated as an OFT, cutting out the Ethereum leg entirely. That separation kept the bridging process manageable and reduced single points of failure.
Gnosis Safe’s deterministic deployment across OP Stack chains meant ether.fi kept identical multisig addresses on OP Mainnet without reconciling address differences. That resolved one of the more persistent complications in cross-chain infrastructure moves.
Custom monitoring tools were built specifically for the migration period. Not one unexpected alert triggered from start to finish. Optimism’s permissionless infrastructure meant core deployments required no special access.
As Charles Mountain, DeFi Ecosystem Lead at ether.fi, put it: “OP Mainnet is the only place where the team that built the stack co-pilots your migration, and where the liquidity is already deep before you arrive.”
How Card Payments Kept Processing Through the Transition
ether.fi paused deposits and withdrawals during the migration window. Card payments, however, never stopped. The platform’s accounting system tracks every card spend independently from onchain settlement.
That separation meant authorizations could continue processing while assets were physically moving between chains.
If something had broken mid-migration, the team could have continued routing through Scroll while investigating. The fallback was built into the structure from the beginning, not added as an afterthought.
Institutional observers running compliance desks and treasury operations at scale took note. The most common reaction from those who watched the move closely was: “wait, how did that actually work?”
Once the migration closed, the team settled all outstanding activity onchain on OP Mainnet. Deposits and withdrawals reopened without incident.
OP Mainnet’s performance floor held throughout — sub-250ms finality through Flashblocks, $0.00001 median transaction fees, and 99.99% uptime.
Pyth Network oracle feeds for EURC/USD, ETHFI/USD, and eUSD/USD were confirmed live before migration day, with Chainlink serving as a fallback.
Mountain added: “We closed the move in three days with zero downtime, and we’re already building the next chapter.”
Since closing, TVL has grown from $220M to $347M. Gold Vaults, a Euro card, and native stablecoin support are next on the roadmap.



