Ethereum Validators May Redirect Up to 10% of Staking Rewards
Ethereum validators could soon play a direct role in funding ecosystem development under a new proposal that would allow up to 10% of staking rewards to be redirected toward public goods, infrastructure, and research projects.
The idea aims to solve Ethereum’s funding challenge as concerns grow over the future financing of Ethereum’s core development efforts.
What the Proposal Wants to Change
The proposal, titled Validator Redirected Revenue, was introduced by Ethereum researcher Clement Lesaege and contributors as a potential protocol-level funding mechanism.
It says that Ethereum suffers from a “free-rider problem,” where everyone benefits from ecosystem improvements, but few are willing to fund them.

Under the proposal, validators would vote on how much of their staking rewards should be redirected to ecosystem funding. If more than 51% of validators support a non-zero contribution, the selected rate would become mandatory for all validators. The maximum redirect rate would be capped at 10%, while validators could also vote to keep it at zero.
The proposal states that, “If 51% of validators signal a redirect rate above 0, the contribution becomes mandatory for all validators.”
Why Ethereum Funding Is Becoming a Concern
According to Lesaege, Ethereum has a funding problem where many important projects struggle to get support, even though they benefit the entire network.
The proposal says validators already have a reason to support Ethereum’s growth. As network activity increases, demand for ETH can rise, more ETH can be burned, and the value of staked ETH may increase.
“Validators fund ecosystem development. Ecosystem development increases network demand. Increased demand leads to more ETH burn.”


The paper estimates that around 35 million to 40 million ETH is currently staked, generating roughly 700,000 ETH in annual staking rewards.
Redirecting just 5% to 10% of those rewards could provide approximately 50,000 to 70,000 ETH per year for Ethereum development without requiring new token issuance.
Ethereum Validators Soon Decide Who Gets Funded
Validators would not only decide how much funding is redirected but also choose where the money goes. Their preferences would be collected into a special “splitter” contract, which would automatically distribute funds to selected projects and organizations.
The goal is to create a simple “set-and-forget” system, allowing validators to support ecosystem development without voting on every individual grant.
The proposal is still in the discussion stage and has not yet become an Ethereum Improvement Proposal (EIP).
The authors said they are seeking community feedback before moving toward a formal implementation.
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