A new proposal in Ethereum’s research community is bringing back the debate over how the network should pay for public goods and core development. The plan would let up to 10% of validator staking rewards go directly to ecosystem funding through the protocol.
Called “validator redirected revenue,” the proposal lets validators choose how much of their rewards they want to give. If most validators agree to contribute more than zero, that rate could become required for everyone on the network.
Supporters say this approach tackles Ethereum’s free-rider problem. Many projects use shared infrastructure, security research, and developer tools, but funding usually comes from the Ethereum Foundation or a small group of contributors.
Proponents see validators, who earn rewards for staking ETH and securing the network, as key to Ethereum’s long-term success. More funding for ecosystem development could boost network activity, improve infrastructure, and possibly raise demand for ETH.
The proposal estimates that Ethereum validators earn about 700,000 ETH each year. Redirecting 5% to 10% of those rewards could provide 50,000 to 70,000 ETH annually for ecosystem projects, or about $120 million at today’s prices.
Validators could also share their preferences on how the funds should be used. These choices would be combined through a system that automates funding decisions.
Still, the proposal has sparked concerns. Some critics worry that big validator groups could work together to steer funding their way. Others point out that many staking rewards actually belong to ETH holders who delegate to staking providers, raising questions about who should decide where the funds go.
Some in the community argue that if validators are open to lower rewards, Ethereum could just cut token issuance instead of creating a new system to redistribute rewards.
The proposal is still being discussed and hasn’t moved to a formal governance process yet. Still, it shows Ethereum’s ongoing search for sustainable ways to fund the infrastructure and public goods that support its large ecosystem.
New post on https://t.co/neli1nzo0Y!
Validator Redirected Revenue
By:
– clesaegeHighlights:
– Ethereum faces a persistent coordination failure: many ecosystem improvements are public goods, so voluntary funding tends to underprovide them, creating…— ethresearchbot (@ethresearchbot) June 21, 2026
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