
TLDR
The Ethereum Foundation began staking part of its treasury to participate directly in network consensus.
The foundation deposited 2,016 ETH and plans to stake about 70,000 ETH in total.
All staking rewards will return to the foundation treasury to support research, development, and grants.
The foundation is using Dirk and Vouch to run validators with a focus on security and distributed operations.
Chris Berry said the tools were created to support honest validators with strong safety measures.
The Ethereum Foundation advanced its treasury strategy this week and began staking part of its holdings as it increased its direct participation in network consensus, and the move introduced new operational details from the group as it outlined its intentions for secure validator deployment.
Ethereum Foundation Staking Initiative
The foundation confirmed its first onchain step and deposited 2,016 Ether as it prepared to stake about 70,000 Ether in total, and it said all future rewards would support protocol research and development. It also said those rewards would continue to support ecosystem growth and grants.
The group adopted open-source tools and deployed new validators through Dirk and Vouch, and it emphasized their shared role in secure validator operations. It stated that both tools handled keys across many operators to avoid any single point of failure.
Dirk functioned as a distributed signer, and Vouch acted as a validator client, and both tools came from Attestant and now operate under Bitwise’s staking stack. Bitwise engineer Chris Berry said the tools were “built with the mindset to fulfill the duties of an honest validator.”
He added that the tools brought client variety, and he also said they supported non-custodial key control and compliance. He stated that these elements matched Ethereum’s broader values.
Technical Infrastructure Choices
The foundation said its system used minority clients and mixed hosted infrastructure with self-managed hardware, and it spread its operations across several jurisdictions. It also said this setup aligned with established staking practices.
The approach followed long-running concerns about client usage concentration, and it reflected the need for wider support across all validator tools. The foundation said its own configuration showed an applied commitment to that concern.
Industry watchers have tracked the evolution of Ethereum clients, and they have watched operators move toward narrow client selections. The foundation’s actions directed attention to this area again, and its stack aimed to show a contrasting example.
Berry said the approach showed trust in the implementation of the software, and he added that the configuration supported the responsibilities of secure validators. He said team decisions followed long-term priorities.
Growing Staking Activity
Ethereum staking continued to expand in recent months, and the share of staked Ether now reached about 30 percent of the supply. Large custodians and liquid staking platforms still held large validator shares.
Observers continued to track those concentrations, and they watched professional operators build optimized systems. The foundation’s move entered this environment with new onchain engagement.
Berry said Ethereum always kept decentralization and security at the protocol level, and he mentioned mechanisms designed to address stakeholder changes. He also said institutional staking remained highly competitive.

