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Ethereum Foundation slashes 54 jobs (≈20% of workforce) and cuts budget 40% while ETH trades around $1,668, down 44% year‑to‑date.
Ethereum Foundation announced on June 23, 2026 that it is eliminating 54 positions – roughly 20% of its ~270‑person staff – and trimming its 2026 operating budget by about 40% amid a year‑to‑date ETH price drop of 44%【1】. The move signals a shift from a broad development engine to a tighter protocol‑oversight role, raising questions about funding for core research as the token’s market performance stalls.
| At a glance | |
|---|---|
| ETH price | $1,668 |
| 24‑h change | –0.46% |
| YTD move | –44% |
| Catalyst | EF staff cuts & 40% budget reduction |
The foundation’s blog post, authored by Vitalik Buterin, outlines a reorganization into five domain‑focused clusters (Protocol, Access, User, Community, Institutional) plus core operations. The cuts follow a “months‑long” internal overhaul tied to a new endowment‑style treasury policy that aims to lower annual spend from roughly 15% of assets to about 5% by 2030【1】. Severance packages include at least one month’s salary per year of service and access to a support fund for career transition.
ETH’s price hovered near $1,668 on the announcement day, a modest 0.46% dip from the previous close, and remains well below its recent high of $2,400 (early 2025)【1】. The 44% YTD decline mirrors broader crypto weakness, with Bitcoin also down roughly 3% on the same day【2】. On‑chain activity remains robust, but the foundation’s reduced budget raises concerns about the continuity of core development projects, especially as senior leadership turnover has accelerated since early 2026【2】.
Former core contributor Trent Van Epps warned that incentive programs tied to the foundation could expire within three to nine months, potentially creating a short‑term funding gap for protocol research【1】. Independent labs such as Ethlabs, launched a day after the layoff announcement, may absorb some of the workload, but the ecosystem’s ability to sustain research velocity without the EF’s payroll remains an open question.
The cuts underscore a strategic pivot for the Ethereum Foundation, prioritizing long‑term financial sustainability over short‑term development breadth. Whether the broader Ethereum ecosystem can fill the resulting research gap will shape the protocol’s innovation trajectory in the coming months.
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AI-assisted synthesis by the TrendWatcher Editorial Desk · sourced from 2 outlets · Jun 25, 2026 · How we report
The foundation cited a reorganization aimed at cutting spending by about 40% and focusing on protocol hardening and privacy amid a competitive and financially disciplined environment.
They showed that banks can enforce compliance and risk rules on Ethereum transactions and route approved bundles to selected block builders without altering the core public network.
Despite the cuts, the Ethereum blockchain continues to see record user activity and growing participation from major financial institutions.
ETH has declined roughly 44% year‑to‑date, contrasting with the broader cryptocurrency market where Bitcoin also faces price pressures.
The foundation appears to be moving from a growth‑stage technology model toward a role as a steward of financial infrastructure, emphasizing stability and compliance.