Mempool in blockchain: why you should understand the "transaction queue"

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Abstract generation in progress

Let’s figure out what happens to your transaction after you click “send.” Spoiler: it doesn’t get into the blockchain instantly. Instead, it ends up in an intermediate zone called the memory pool(memory pool). Essentially, this is a buffer for all unconfirmed operations in the network.

Imagine a bank during rush hour

When you go to a bank branch during lunch break, there’s a huge line. People stand in the lobby waiting for the cashier to become available. So, the mempool is exactly this waiting hall, but for digital transactions. Your operation arrives there and joins the queue along with thousands of others. Validators and miners (they are like cashiers) choose which transactions to process first.

And just like in real life: if you’re willing to pay more (increase the gas fee), you can jump ahead of others in line. This isn’t a bribe to the clerk, but a normal market mechanism. A higher fee — and your transaction will be included in the next block. A lower fee — and you’ll wait until the network clears.

How the mempool is actually organized

Unlike a doctor’s office, the mempool isn’t the same for everyone. Each node in the network maintains its own version of the pending transaction pool. Nodes constantly exchange information with each other, synchronizing their data to keep the picture roughly the same. This guarantees that everyone sees approximately the same operations in the queue.

There’s one important detail: if the pool becomes overloaded (the network is congested), nodes start removing transactions with the lowest fees. Your operation might simply disappear from the mempool, as if it never existed. This means it won’t happen at all if the fee is too modest.

Why this matters for your wallet

Understanding the mempool helps save money. When the network is calm, the pool is almost empty — look at the queue, see that people aren’t in a hurry, and set the minimum fee. When the network is jam-packed, the mempool is overflowing — then either increase the fee or wait until the wave passes.

Experienced traders monitor the state of the mempool as one of the key indicators. It helps them understand how much they really need to pay for quick processing. Beginners often set a random fee and are surprised why their transaction is stuck or disappeared. Now you know: the mempool is to blame.

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