Ethereum has had a difficult 2026 by most measures. After peaking above $3,600 in October 2025, ETH spent much of Q1 2026 grinding back toward $2,000, weighed down by macro headwinds from the Iran conflict, persistent ETF outflows, and the broader risk-off environment that kept the Fear and Greed Index in single digits for over 60 consecutive days. The ceasefire rally that lifted Bitcoin back above $70,000 also carried ETH through the $2,200 level on April 11, posting a 2.3% gain on the day and over 7% on the week. But beyond the price recovery, the more important story for Ethereum in April 2026 is the convergence of several structural developments that are building toward what could be the network’s most consequential second half in years.
Where ETH Stands Right Now
Ethereum moved back above the $2,200 mark after a 2.3% daily rise on April 11. The broader market pushed the total crypto market capitalisation to $2.53 trillion, with Bitcoin’s dominance holding above 57%.
Ether rose over 7.8% in the week leading into April 11, with spot Ether ETFs drawing approximately $85 million in net inflows on April 9 alone. Ethereum’s Q1 2026 mainnet processed 200.4 million transactions, with active Layer 2 addresses surging 1,704% quarter over quarter.
Those on-chain metrics tell a story that the price action alone has obscured. Ethereum’s network is being used at record levels even as the token itself has underperformed relative to its own fundamentals. The combination of record transaction counts, recovering ETF inflows, and the imminent Glamsterdam upgrade gives ETH a stronger fundamental base entering Q2 than its Q1 price performance would suggest.
The Staking Picture: Deep and Growing
The most structurally significant development in Ethereum’s ecosystem in 2026 is not any single price move. It is the scale of the staking programme, which has been expanding continuously and now represents one of the most important supply-side dynamics in crypto.
Approximately 35.8 million ETH, roughly 30% of total circulating supply, is staked as of early 2026, secured by approximately 1.1 million active validators. Staking yields approximately 2.8% to 3.5% annually. This proportion has nearly tripled since March 2023, when 18 million ETH, representing 11% of supply, was staked.
The Ethereum Foundation executed its largest single staking event on March 30, depositing 22,517 ETH, worth approximately $46 million at the time, into the Beacon Chain. The Foundation has also been building toward a 70,000 ETH staking target, with the dual strategy of staking the majority of holdings for yield while converting smaller amounts to stablecoins for operational liquidity.
Simultaneously, the institutional staking product market has arrived. US spot Ethereum ETFs have attracted approximately $11.6 billion in cumulative net inflows as of early April 2026, with BlackRock’s iShares Ethereum Trust holding over $6.5 billion in assets under management. Staking-enabled ETF products launched in early 2026, allowing investors to earn native Ethereum staking rewards through regulated vehicles. BlackRock’s staked Ethereum ETF attracted $155 million on its first day of trading.
That last figure is significant. Staked ETH ETFs represent the intersection of two powerful institutional trends: the regulated crypto ETF market that Bitcoin pioneered, and the yield-generating staking infrastructure that makes ETH a fundamentally different investment thesis than BTC. An institution that buys a staked ETH ETF gets Bitcoin-style regulated access plus 3% to 3.5% annual yield distributed through traditional brokerage infrastructure. For fixed income managers rotating out of low-yield environments, that combination is increasingly relevant.
The Glamsterdam Upgrade: What It Actually Does
The Glamsterdam hard fork, targeted for the first half of 2026 with a tentative date around June, represents Ethereum’s biggest base-layer upgrade since The Merge in 2022. The two previous hard forks, Pectra in May 2025 and Fusaka in December 2025, focused on Layer 2 scaling and blob mechanics. Glamsterdam targets Ethereum’s Layer 1 itself.
Glamsterdam introduces parallel transaction processing, on-chain block building, and a 78.6% reduction in gas fees across both simple transfers and complex smart contract calls. The gas limit rises from 60 million to 200 million per block, with throughput targeting 10,000 transactions per second, roughly ten times what Ethereum handles today.
Glamsterdam’s two key proposals replace market functions that evolved informally outside Ethereum’s protocol with more explicit, rule-bound equivalents on-chain. Enshrined Proposer-Builder Separation, known as ePBS, moves the builder market into the protocol itself. Currently, validators trust relays not to manipulate block contents, a trust assumption sitting entirely outside protocol rules. Under ePBS, builders cryptographically seal their blocks and commit to a bid, with validators selecting the highest bid without seeing transaction contents. The result is a block-building market subject to the same consensus rules as the rest of the network. Block-Level Access Lists address execution throughput, enabling parallel processing of transactions that do not interact with the same state.
For users, the practical near-term effect is a dramatically cheaper and faster L1. At 10,000 TPS with sub-dollar gas fees, Ethereum would retain its advantages in security, decentralisation, and ecosystem depth while closing the speed and cost gap that Solana bulls have exploited. More base layer activity would mean more direct value accrual to ETH holders through fee burns and staking rewards.
The Institutional Stack Building Around ETH
Beyond the upgrade itself, the institutional infrastructure being built around Ethereum in 2026 has been quietly significant. Major financial institutions are actively transitioning parts of the $12.5 trillion repo market onto Ethereum, with central banks involved in early-stage testing of on-chain repo mechanics. Aave v4, which launched on Ethereum mainnet on March 30 with a hub-and-spoke architecture targeting real-world assets and institutional credit, represents the DeFi layer of the same institutional adoption story.
Charles Schwab’s confirmed H1 2026 launch of direct ETH spot trading for its 38.9 million brokerage clients adds a distribution channel for retail demand that did not previously exist. Morgan Stanley has filed an S-1 for an Ethereum trust alongside its MSBT Bitcoin ETF launch. Together, those two developments represent a near-term supply of institutional and retail demand for ETH that has not yet been fully priced in.
The Path to the Recovery
The honest assessment of ETH in April 2026 is that the asset is significantly below where its fundamental metrics would suggest it should trade. A network processing record transactions, with 30% of supply locked in staking earning yield, spot ETFs accumulating billions in assets, and the biggest base-layer upgrade in four years six weeks away, should not be trading at levels that represent a 40% drawdown from its 2025 high.
Ethereum’s price declined from approximately $3,000 at the end of 2025 to below $1,800 in February 2026 due to several converging factors: broader recession fears, risk-off sentiment, selling by the Ethereum co-founder, persistent ETF outflows during the most acute phase of the Iran conflict, and macro uncertainty. Since then, the recovery has been grinding but consistent, with ETH back above $2,200 and on its best weekly performance since October 2025.
The structural case for ETH recovery into Q2 rests on four pillars: Islamabad talks resolving the geopolitical overhang, Glamsterdam deploying successfully in June, Schwab’s ETH trading opening a new retail distribution channel, and spot ETF inflows returning to the sustained positive trajectory they demonstrated in Q4 2025. If those conditions align over the next 90 days, ETH has a credible path back toward $3,000 before mid-year.














