Ethereum Foundation Proposes 5-10% Tax on Validator Rewards to Fund Operations

What You Need to Know
- Ethereum Foundation proposes 5-10% annual tax on validator staking rewards to fund operations.
- Foundation’s ETH reserves dropped to 102,700 after poor investment performance with 82% net loss overall.
- Validator tax would generate $62-125 million annually while Foundation cuts spending from 15% to 5% of reserves.
- Community response has been hostile; mandatory recurring tax creates more organized resistance than previous opaque ETH sales.
The Ethereum Foundation is proposing to tax validator staking rewards at between 5% and 10% annually, redirecting that revenue toward its own operating budget rather than continuing to liquidate its ETH reserves to cover spending.
The Foundation’s reserves have fallen to 102,700 ETH after years of backing projects across the ecosystem, and its investment track record has been poor: 21 investments with an 82% net loss overall, including allocations to biohacking and longevity research that never achieved meaningful adoption or liquidity. The validator tax proposal, called Validator Redirected Revenue, would generate an estimated $62 million to $125 million per year at current prices, while the Foundation simultaneously cuts its own spending rate from roughly 15% of reserves to around 5%. The community reaction has been predictably hostile, and the timing matters: this comes after leadership departures and expiring contributor incentives that have already strained the relationship between the Foundation and the people actually building on the network. Asking validators, who collectively have over 30 million ETH locked in the Beacon Chain, to fund an organization whose spending decisions they have had no visibility into is a different kind of ask than simply selling ETH quietly.
The Foundation’s ETH sales were unpopular precisely because they were opaque. A mandatory tax on staking rewards makes that extraction visible and recurring, which tends to generate more organized resistance, not less.
Validators running significant positions, including entities like BitMine which reportedly holds nearly 5% of the ETH supply in staked form, face a direct yield reduction under this proposal. The community response has already shifted toward demanding a transparent spending plan, which is a precondition the Foundation has historically resisted. ETH itself has not responded positively, sliding to around $1,655 as this played out, and the simultaneous launch of ETHLabs, a new non-profit research branch meant to focus on Ethereum as a global settlement layer, did not provide any offsetting momentum. A foundation that needs to restructure its funding model while also redefining its own mission and defending its legitimacy with validators is carrying several problems at once.
The Foundation has framed ETHLabs as independent and oriented toward supporting ETH’s role as a store of value alongside its research goals. Whether that framing holds depends on whether the validator tax proposal advances, and on whether the Foundation follows through on the transparency the community is now explicitly requesting.
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