The people who keep Ethereum alive are running out of money. Former Ethereum Foundation coordinator Trent Van Epps issued a stark warning: core protocol development needs $30 million a year, and no one has a clear plan to pay for it. With a key funding program already expired and the Foundation cutting its own budget by 40%, a slow-burning crisis could be just months away.
The Warning That Has Ethereum’s Ecosystem on Edge
Van Epps spent nearly five years coordinating core development at the Ethereum Foundation before departing in April 2026. He did not hold back when he raised the alarm. In a June 26 CoinDesk interview, he said Ethereum’s core development ecosystem could face a funding shortfall within the next three to nine months, citing two converging pressures that have left more than 10 client teams, research groups, and coordination teams without a reliable financial bridge. His estimate is specific: **keeping Ethereum’s base layer healthy costs roughly $30 million every year.** Right now, no institution is committed to covering that full amount. > “The level of funding needed for core development is relatively stable. I would estimate around $30 million per year. We’ve distributed over almost $40 million to a lot of these core developers, but this is over four years, and ultimately it’s not sufficient.” — Trent Van Epps, former Ethereum Foundation coordinator The warning landed just days after the Foundation confirmed it had eliminated 54 staff positions, roughly 20% of its total workforce, and slashed its 2026 operating budget by 40%.
How the Funding Pipeline Cracked Open
Two events collided at nearly the same moment, and the result is a structural gap. The Client Incentive Program (CIP) expired in April 2026. This four-year initiative funded Ethereum’s execution and consensus client teams through staking rewards. It was, for many teams, the financial backbone of their operations. No replacement has been announced. At the same time, the Ethereum Foundation is deliberately drawing down its treasury under a philosophy it calls “Subtraction.” The strategy, originally introduced in 2019 and reaffirmed in the Foundation’s March 2026 mandate, aims to reduce the EF’s central role and push responsibility outward to the broader ecosystem. The numbers behind the EF’s spending reduction are significant:
- Current spending rate: Approximately 15% of treasury holdings per year
- 2026 budget cut: 40% overall reduction
- Target rate by 2030: 5% annually under a long-term endowment model
- Staff eliminated (June 22, 2026): 54 positions (roughly 20% of workforce)
- CIP status: Expired April 2026, no successor named
- Protocol Guild total (4 years): Nearly $40 million distributed, not sufficient alone
Van Epps acknowledged that the subtraction philosophy succeeded in signaling that the EF was never meant to be Ethereum’s permanent center of power. His concern is that the ecosystem has not built replacement institutions fast enough to absorb what the Foundation is stepping away from.
The Free Rider Problem Ethereum Can No Longer Ignore
Van Epps identified the deeper structural issue with a name: the free rider problem. DeFi protocols, stablecoin issuers, and Layer 2 networks extract enormous economic value from Ethereum’s shared infrastructure. None of them face a mechanism that compels contribution to its upkeep. **Ethereum carries approximately $200 billion in market cap and processes trillions of dollars in stablecoin settlement volume every year. The $30 million annual cost of maintaining the base layer is, by any measure, a rounding error.** Yet the engineers and researchers responsible for that base layer have historically survived on a patchwork of grants, foundation budgets, and voluntary collective funding. That model is now under serious strain. The departure numbers make the stakes concrete. At least ten senior figures left the Ethereum Foundation in the first half of 2026. This includes both co-executive directors Tomasz Stańczak and Hsiao-Wei Wang, along with researchers Tim Beiko, Barnabé Monnot, Carl Beekhuizen, Julian Ma, and Alex Stokes. Ethereum researcher Dankrad Feist described these departures as “truly bearish for Ethereum,” linking some exits to management issues as much as financial ones. What happens without consistent funding is not theoretical. Experienced developers with years of specialized context leave for better-paid work. Protocol upgrades slow down. Security reviews get delayed. Competing chains, which have no such funding problem, gain ground.
New Organizations Step In, but Gaps Remain
The ecosystem has not been idle. Several responses are already forming, even if none of them alone solves the full $30 million question. Protocol Guild, the collective Van Epps helped build, has distributed nearly $40 million to core developers over four years through voluntary token allocations and donations. It funds active contributors without controlling protocol direction. Scaling it to reliably cover $30 million annually is a different challenge than running one-off grant programs. **On June 22, the same day the EF announced its mass layoffs, five former Ethereum Foundation researchers launched an independent nonprofit called Ethlabs.** Its co-founders are Ansgar Dietrichs, Barnabé Monnot, Caspar Schwarz-Schilling, Josh Rudolf, and Julian Ma, all of whom shaped key parts of Ethereum’s technical design over the past decade. Ethlabs launched with anchor funding from Bitmine Immersion Technologies, SharpLink, and Ethereum co-founder Joe Lubin, with additional backing from Anchorage Digital, Octant, and SNZ, plus more than 50 community partners. Funders receive quarterly reports and annual audits but hold no authority over research direction. The lab’s initial focus areas include faster settlement, native asset issuance, cross-chain infrastructure, mainnet capacity, and research into ETH’s monetary properties. Separately, one developer has proposed forming a new organization backed by as much as $1 billion to provide steadier long-term core funding. That idea remains in early discussion. Not everyone agrees there is a crisis. Bitmine chairman Tom Lee pushed back publicly on X, arguing the departures are “short-term noise” and that profit-seeking stakers will eventually step in.
What the Glamsterdam Upgrade Puts at Stake
All of this is happening as Ethereum prepares for its most ambitious protocol upgrade since the Merge. Glamsterdam entered its final devnet testing phase in mid-June 2026. It is expected to activate on mainnet in the second half of 2026, with developers pointing to a September-to-December window based on past testnet timelines. The upgrade ships two headline changes. Enshrined Proposer-Builder Separation (ePBS) pulls block-building mechanics directly into the consensus layer, reducing reliance on third-party relays and improving transparency around MEV. Block-Level Access Lists (BALs) allow blocks to declare which accounts they will access in advance, enabling parallel transaction processing.
- Gas limit target: From 60 million toward 200 million, roughly tripling L1 capacity
- Standard ETH transfers: Could become up to 71% cheaper under new gas repricing
- Scale: Potentially supports up to 10,000 TPS-equivalent throughput
- Upgrade status: Final devnet phase as of June 2026, H2 mainnet target
**That upgrade is being delivered by the exact teams now facing funding uncertainty.** Van Epps was precise about the risk. Without continuous funding, Ethereum loses people with critical institutional context built up over years. It falls behind on future challenges like quantum computing resistance and deeper scaling. “Legitimacy is downstream of repeated competency, which is itself downstream of resources,” he wrote. The Ethereum Foundation says its treasury strategy keeps it solvent in the medium term. It staked tens of thousands of ETH to generate yield instead of selling holdings, allocated nearly $10 million in grants during Q1 2026 across projects including Geth, Erigon, and Lighthouse, and invested portions of its treasury into DeFi yield strategies. That is meaningful activity. But it is not a structural answer to the $30 million annual question. Vitalik Buterin himself has previously stated that the Foundation “was not designed to be an eternal steward.” That sentence now carries real weight. Ethereum’s next several months will reveal whether the ecosystem’s new distributed funding model can mature fast enough to carry the weight being stepped away from, before the people who actually build the network decide they can no longer afford to wait. The technology is sound. The network is advancing. But the financial architecture that keeps the engineers working has a visible crack running through it, and the clock Van Epps set is already ticking. What is your take on Ethereum’s developer funding crisis? Drop your thoughts in the comments and share this story on X with #ETHFundingCrisis to keep the conversation going.

