Zcash Ironwood upgrade plans are now concrete after protocol developers reached agreement on specific consensus rule changes.
The decision follows the disclosure of a critical vulnerability in Zcash’s Orchard shielded pool, which exposed the network to potential counterfeit ZEC minting.
Developer Sean Bowe outlined the changes in a post on X, marking a turning point for a community shaken by the security flaw and a sharp drop in ZEC’s market value.
The Zcash Ironwood upgrade will introduce a new shielded pool built on the Orchard protocol, mirroring the structure of the existing Orchard pool.
Both the old and new pools will share the same Orchard circuit, which verifies that only valid transactions are processed. This shared circuit design allows developers to apply changes across both pools using a single mechanism.
Central to the upgrade is a new flag embedded in the Orchard circuit. Bowe explained that this flag, toggled by consensus rules, disables payments to other users within a pool while preserving the ability to create change notes.
In his X post, he described the feature directly: “This flag disables payments to other users within that pool, while maintaining the ability to create change notes,” adding that it “enables a privacy safeguard.”
Once the Zcash Ironwood upgrade activates, the flag will be switched on for the old Orchard pool. Payments to the old pool will also be blocked by constraining the valueBalance field. As a result, wallets sending to Orchard receivers will automatically route funds through the new pool instead.
A core objective of the Zcash Ironwood upgrade is restoring confidence in ZEC’s circulating supply. The upgrade uses the existing turnstile mechanism to cap the amount of ZEC that can be transacted at any given time.
Bowe was direct about the guarantee this provides, writing that “the amount of ZEC that anyone can transact with is no more than the amount that is supposed to exist.”
This design directly addresses the fallout from the Orchard vulnerability. Because the Orchard pool’s strong privacy properties made it impossible to confirm whether counterfeit ZEC was ever minted, developers needed a verifiable method to bound supply. The turnstile provides that assurance without requiring a full audit of historical transactions.
As wallets migrate funds from the old Orchard pool to the new Ironwood pool, the process will gradually generate evidence that no counterfeiting occurred.
Each successful migration strengthens the case for the integrity of ZEC’s supply, offering long-term reassurance to holders and ecosystem participants.
The vulnerability disclosure last week sent ZEC tumbling over 50%, falling from approximately $630 to around $303.
The news prompted notable exits, including BitMEX co-founder Arthur Hayes, who publicly disclosed liquidating his entire ZEC position. Confidence among privacy-focused traders was visibly shaken by the incident.
Since then, ZEC has recovered ground, rising roughly 6.1% in the 24 hours following the consensus agreement announcement.
As of the latest data, ZEC traded at $450.49, reflecting a recovery of nearly 48.7% from its June 5 low. Market participants appeared to respond positively to the clarity provided by the finalized upgrade plan.
Josh Swihart, founder of Zcash Open Development Lab, addressed the broader outcome in a Sunday post, writing: “We resolved the issue, battle-tested our incident support processes, built stronger relationships with others who support the network, tested our own resilience, and unified as a community of builders to agree on a path forward.”
Zcash Open Development Lab has separately indicated it is targeting late July for the Ironwood activation, though Zcash co-founder Zooko Wilcox noted the timeline remains subject to change.
The post Zcash Ironwood Upgrade Locks In Consensus Rules, Eyes Late July Activation appeared first on Blockonomi.

