The Ethereum Foundation has cut roughly 20% of its workforce as part of a sweeping organizational overhaul, marking the latest chapter in a turbulent period that has seen a series of high-profile departures from the nonprofit organization supporting the Ethereum blockchain.
The foundation said it eliminated 54 positions, representing about one-fifth of its staff, as it completed a months-long restructuring effort aimed at sharpening its focus on Ethereum’s long-term development priorities. The organization will now operate through five core work clusters focused on protocol development, user access, community engagement, institutional outreach, and ecosystem support, alongside operational and management functions.
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In a statement announcing the changes, the foundation said the new structure is intended to improve execution on what it considers “critical tasks” for Ethereum’s future while creating a leaner and more focused organization. Employees affected by the layoffs will receive severance packages and support for transitioning into other roles within the broader Ethereum ecosystem.
The restructuring comes against the backdrop of growing leadership turnover that has fueled debate across the cryptocurrency community. Over the past several months, several prominent researchers, developers, and senior contributors have left the organization, prompting questions about the foundation’s future direction and governance model.
Among the notable departures are senior contributors involved in Ethereum’s core protocol development, while recent leadership changes have included executive-level exits during a broader effort to redefine the foundation’s role within the increasingly decentralized Ethereum ecosystem.
The Ethereum Foundation has argued that the transition reflects a deliberate strategy rather than a crisis. The organization has increasingly emphasized that it should serve as a steward of the network rather than its central authority, supporting research, public goods, and protocol development while encouraging greater decentralization across the ecosystem.
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Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has previously signaled that the foundation would become smaller and more focused as Ethereum matures, reinforcing the idea that responsibility for innovation should be distributed across independent development teams rather than concentrated within a single institution.
The workforce reduction represents one of the most significant restructurings in the foundation’s history and underscores the challenges facing Ethereum as it balances decentralization, governance, and innovation in an increasingly competitive blockchain landscape.
