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Ethereum faces developer funding shortfall risk

Ethereum faces potential funding gap within nine months

Ethereum’s core development network could run into a funding shortfall within nine months after the April 2026 expiration of the Client Incentive Program, according to former Ethereum Foundation contributor Trent VanEpps. He warned that no replacement funding mechanism is currently in place, raising concerns about maintaining the network’s technical infrastructure.

VanEpps, who coordinated client development efforts from May 2021 to April 2026, said the ecosystem requires roughly $30 million annually. These funds support more than ten client teams, research groups, and coordination units responsible for upgrades and protocol stability.

End of incentive program removes key funding source

The four-year Client Incentive Program provided staking-based payouts to development teams and played a central role in preserving client diversity. Its conclusion eliminated a major funding pipeline.

VanEpps said prolonged underfunding could drive away experienced contributors and delay scaling and security upgrades. He added that rebuilding lost talent and momentum later could prove difficult, even if new funding emerges.

He also pointed to risks in long-term areas such as quantum resistance research, warning that disruptions now could weaken Ethereum’s ability to address future technical challenges.

Foundation’s reduced role raises coordination questions

VanEpps assessed the Ethereum Foundation’s “subtraction” strategy, designed to reduce its central influence. While the approach has lowered organizational control, he said it has not clearly reassigned critical responsibilities to other parts of the ecosystem.

He reiterated that the foundation was never intended to oversee Ethereum indefinitely and that future governance should depend on neutral, sustainable funding systems. He referenced comments by co-founder Vitalik Buterin, who said in 2022 that the foundation had achieved its original pre-launch goals.

Leadership exits add to uncertainty

The funding concerns come alongside a wave of leadership changes. Co-executive director Hsiao-Wei Wang recently stepped down after nine years with the organization.

Other departures include researchers Carl Beek and Julian Ma, along with earlier exits by former co-director Tomasz Stańczak, Josh Stark, and project leads Barnabé Monnot and Tim Beiko. Researcher Alex Stokes is currently on sabbatical.

In May, Buterin said the foundation would operate with a leaner structure, reduce ETH sales, and focus on priorities like censorship resistance and security.

Community funding initiatives gain traction

VanEpps’ warnings have drawn attention to community-led funding efforts. Protocol Guild has emerged as a key mechanism, distributing donated tokens directly to more than 190 core contributors through on-chain vesting.

Projects building on Ethereum are also adopting a “1% pledge,” allocating a portion of their tokens to support core infrastructure. These initiatives have accumulated contributions valued at over $92 million at the time of donation.

Developer activity and staking remain strong

Despite concerns about a potential talent exodus, on-chain data points to continued engagement. By mid-June 2026, Ethereum had attracted more than one million unique developers over its lifetime, with around 232,000 active in the past year.

Network participation remains high. About 32.7% of total ETH supply is staked, marking a record level. Validator demand is also strong, with entry queues exceeding 60 days and no exit backlog as of late May.

The base annual percentage rate for staking has declined to roughly 2.78% due to the large number of validators, now نزدیک 900,000. Even so, traders continue to stake, signaling sustained demand for participation in network security.

ETH price reflects broader market pressure

Ether traded near $1,688 early Friday, down 3.1% over 24 hours. The token remains approximately 65.7% below its August 2025 peak of $4,946.

Buterin has recently reiterated that the Ethereum Foundation is transitioning into a smaller, more focused role, describing it as “one node among many.” He emphasized that the ecosystem must develop its own sustainable support systems as the foundation steps back.


Worried about Ethereum’s future? Learn how to buy Ethereum and position your portfolio before potential network shifts.

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