The performance of deep spiking neural networks (SNNs) often relies on batch normalization (BN). However, the advanced dynamic BN variants used in state-of-the-art models introduce runtime multiplications, which weaken the hardware-efficiency motivation of SNNs. To address this tension, we identify catastrophic firing-rate decay as a primary cause of severe performance degradation in normalization-free SNNs. Guided by this insight, this work proposes the Intrinsically Stable SNN (IS-SNN) architecture, which removes activation-normalization layers by enforcing signal homeostasis through topology-aware weight standardization and modified residual connections. By folding the standardization operations into static weights offline, IS-SNN removes the runtime statistics tracking and multiplications introduced by activation normalization, restoring an accumulation-oriented inference datapath. Comprehensive experiments show that IS-SNN achieves performance competitive with or superior to computationally expensive dynamic BN techniques across VGG, ResNet, and Transformer-based models. Notably, it achieves a competitive accuracy of 68.05\% on ImageNet and overcomes the severe depth limitations of prior BN-free attempts. Together with a 96.4\% reduction in FPGA lookup table resource consumption for neuron implementations, these results support IS-SNN as a practical framework for building accurate and hardware-friendly deep neuromorphic systems.