The Ethereum Foundation has begun staking a portion of its ether (ETH) treasury. The nonprofit said Tuesday it made an initial deposit of 2,016 ETH and expects approximately 70,000 ETH to be staked overall, with rewards directed back to its treasury.
The move aligns with the foundation’s treasury policy announced last year, which outlined plans to actively deploy treasury assets rather than simply hold them. Under that policy, the organization intends to seek returns on treasury assets while supporting Ethereum’s ecosystem and maintaining sufficient reserves to fund operations and long-term initiatives.
“We are excited to take this important step, which helps secure the Ethereum network and at the same time fund the EF’s core operations and activities, including protocol R&D, ecosystem development, community grant funding, and more,” the foundation said in an X post.
Blockchain data shows the initial 2,016 ETH deposit was made to Ethereum’s staking deposit contract, placing the associated validator in the activation queue before it becomes active.
Treasury reform and sustainability push
The staking deployment follows the Ethereum Foundation’s June 2025 treasury policy, which marked a broader shift toward more deliberate management of its crypto holdings. At the time, the foundation said it would pursue strategies including solo staking and supplying ETH to established protocols, aiming to earn returns while supporting Ethereum’s decentralized finance ecosystem.
According to the foundation, its treasury exists to support Ethereum’s long-term sustainability and core mission of enabling applications that run without downtime, censorship, fraud, or third-party interference. The policy also emphasized balancing financial returns with its role as a steward of the ecosystem, while maintaining sufficient liquidity to fund operations and grants.
The move also comes as Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has sold 10,723 ETH since early February to help finance open-source software, hardware, and biotech projects, according to onchain data, highlighting his own efforts to help fund Ethereum ecosystem development through personal capital deployments.
To carry out the staking initiative, the Ethereum Foundation said it is using open-source tools, including Dirk and Vouch, developed by Bitwise’s Attestant. Dirk acts as a distributed signer, allowing validator operations across multiple jurisdictions and ensuring no single point of failure can interrupt validation, while Vouch helps coordinate validator operations as part of the foundation’s staking infrastructure.
The foundation added that its staking setup uses minority clients and a distributed mix of hosted infrastructure and self-managed hardware, reinforcing its emphasis on alignment with Ethereum’s decentralization principles.
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