For years, the Ethereum Foundation was the gravitational center of Ethereum development. It funded the client teams, coordinated the research, employed the researchers who designed the network’s major upgrades, and served as the single institution that everyone looked to for direction. That model is now breaking apart in real time, and the breakup is producing something new.
Five former Ethereum Foundation researchers just launched EthLabs, an independent nonprofit research and development lab. The founding team (Ansgar Dietrichs, Barnabé Monnot, Caspar Schwarz-Schilling, Josh Rudolf, and Julian Ma) worked on core parts of Ethereum’s technical design including finality, scaling, data availability, the Ethereum Virtual Machine, and protocol economics. All five left the Foundation, some just this year, to build the new organization.
The timing tells the story. EthLabs unveiled itself just one day before major layoffs at the Ethereum Foundation, and only days after co-executive director Hsiao-Wei Wang announced her resignation. Wang was the second co-executive director to leave in 2026, following Tomasz Stańczak’s departure in February. Since January, at least nine prominent members of the Ethereum Foundation have departed. The exodus has fueled questions about the Foundation’s future role and whether Ethereum’s governance model is entering a new chapter.
For ETH holders navigating a token that has fallen to $1,700 and tested its long-term support line, the reorganization of Ethereum’s core development matters. It could either strengthen the network through diversified, independent development or fragment the coordination that a single foundation historically provided.
What EthLabs Actually Is
EthLabs is structured as an independent nonprofit focused on Ethereum protocol work with a stronger emphasis on real-world adoption than the Foundation traditionally maintained.
Executive Director Ansgar Dietrichs framed the launch as a response to a gap rather than an attempt to replace the Foundation. “We looked around, didn’t see anyone else stepping up,” Dietrichs told CoinDesk. “After two months of that, we looked at each other and said, ‘Well, if no one else is stepping up, then it has to be us.'”
The organisation’s stated mission is making Ethereum “the settlement layer of the global economy.” Its work focuses on adoption-oriented engineering: improving Ethereum’s scalability, strengthening layer-1 performance, advancing interoperability, and identifying the technical barriers preventing broader institutional use. “We’re deliberately positioning ourselves to fill the gaps that the Ethereum Foundation now deliberately leaves,” Dietrichs said. “We’re not trying to create a competing vision for Ethereum.”
The funding structure is what makes EthLabs genuinely distinctive. The three anchor funders are BitMine, SharpLink, and Ethereum co-founder Joe Lubin. Additional institutional contributors include SNZ, Octant, and Anchorage Digital. Community supporters span roughly 50 named contributors including Hayden Adams of Uniswap, Jesse Pollak of Base, Justin Drake of the Ethereum Foundation, Danny Ryan of Etherealize, and Tim Beiko.
The BitMine and SharpLink backing matters because both are major corporate ETH treasury holders. BitMine holds more than 5.67 million ETH, making it the largest publicly known corporate Ethereum treasury. SharpLink is another major publicly traded ETH treasury firm. Both have direct financial exposure to Ethereum’s success, giving them clear incentive to fund the development that supports the network’s long-term value.
To prevent that financial interest from steering research, EthLabs built in structural separation. Funds are distributed by an external grants administrator that screens and allocates capital. Funders receive quarterly reporting and an annual independent audit, but they don’t control the research agenda or technical direction. Final decisions remain with EthLabs leadership. Whether the lab maintains that separation in practice will determine its credibility.
Why the Foundation Is Changing
EthLabs emerged from a specific crisis at the Ethereum Foundation that has been building throughout 2026.
The Foundation announced on June 23 that it had cut about 20% of its workforce and is reducing its budget by roughly 40% as it shifts toward a more sustainable, endowment-style operating model. The organization will be split into five domain-focused clusters: protocol, access, user, community, and institutional. The overhaul aims to bring annual spending down from about 15% of treasury assets to roughly 5% by 2030.
The financial pressure driving these changes is structural. The Foundation historically funded development from its ETH treasury, accumulated during Ethereum’s 2014 presale. That model ties the Foundation’s spending capacity directly to ETH’s market price. With the token trading near $1,700 in June 2026, well below its 2025 high near $4,953, the Foundation’s real purchasing power has compressed significantly.
The leadership departures compounded the financial pressure. At least ten senior figures left the Foundation in 2026. Beyond the two co-executive director resignations, researchers Tim Beiko, Barnabé Monnot, Carl Beekhuizen, Julian Ma, and Alex Stokes all departed or began leaves. Protocol Guild coordinator Trent Van Epps left in April and later warned that Ethereum’s core development could face a $30 million annual funding gap within three to nine months.
The Foundation’s leadership frames the changes as a planned transition rather than a crisis. Joe Lubin stated that Ethereum is entering a new era where multiple independent organizations will guide the network’s technology and values, rather than concentrating that responsibility in a single foundation. The Foundation’s Chief Strategy Advisor published a framework describing how spinouts should be evaluated and funded, explicitly supporting the emergence of organizations like EthLabs.
The Broader Reorganization
EthLabs isn’t the only new organization emerging from the Foundation’s transition. A parallel entity called Ethereum Institutional launched the same week.
Ethereum Institutional focuses on institutional engagement, market intelligence, ecosystem marketing, industry research, and events. It launched with backing from BitMine, SharpLink Gaming, and Joe Lubin, drawing support from Standard Chartered, Etherealize, Aztec Labs, Spark, and Bitwise. The organisation is led by David Walsh, who previously headed enterprise efforts at the Ethereum Foundation.
Its mission is to give institutions a neutral, independent point of contact as they evaluate Ethereum for tokenization, stablecoins, and other onchain financial applications. “The world’s largest institutions are deciding where tokenization, stablecoins, and onchain markets will settle,” the organization said. “We’re ready to make Ethereum the base layer for institutional finance.”
Together with the existing Protocol Guild and Etherealize, the ecosystem is developing what Lubin called a “multi-node future” where the Foundation is one steward among several. The model distributes Ethereum’s development, adoption, and coordination functions across multiple independent organizations rather than concentrating them in a single entity.
The distributed model has both advantages and risks. The advantage is resilience: multiple organizations reduce single-point-of-failure risk and allow specialisation. The risk is coordination: the single Foundation historically ensured that development efforts aligned. Whether the distributed model maintains that alignment is the central open question.
What This Means for ETH Holders
For Ethereum investors, the reorganization carries specific implications that go beyond the immediate headlines.
The most immediate concern is whether the transition disrupts the Glamsterdam upgrade timeline. The next major Ethereum upgrade targets scaling and execution improvements through proposer-builder separation and parallel execution. These require sustained engineering work from client teams. EthLabs plans to continue the layer-1 scaling research its founders previously led at the Foundation, which provides some continuity. But the disruption of the transition period creates execution risk.
The funding diversification is arguably positive for the long-term thesis. The Foundation’s dependence on its ETH treasury created a structural problem: when ETH prices fall, the Foundation’s development capacity shrinks precisely when the network needs support most. EthLabs and Ethereum Institutional draw funding from corporate treasuries and diverse contributors, reducing the dependence on any single funding source tied to ETH’s price.
Tom Lee, whose BitMine is both a major ETH holder and an EthLabs backer, dismissed the crisis framing entirely. “In my opinion, zero chance of this ‘crisis’ happening for $ETH,” Lee posted, adding “Funding secured.” His view reflects the argument that the $30 million annual funding requirement is trivial relative to Ethereum’s resources, and that entities with financial exposure to ETH have clear incentive to fund development.
The talent isn’t leaving Ethereum. It’s reorganizing. The researchers who designed Ethereum’s major upgrades are continuing their work through new structures with independent funding. Whether that reorganization maintains the coordination and continuity that a single institution provided is the test that EthLabs, Protocol Guild, Etherealize, Ethereum Institutional, and the restructured Foundation will face together through the end of 2026.
For ETH holders, the signal is genuinely mixed. The transition creates near-term uncertainty about coordination and execution. But the emergence of well-funded, talented independent organizations committed to Ethereum’s development demonstrates that the ecosystem’s core human capital remains engaged. The next several quarters will reveal whether the distributed model strengthens or weakens Ethereum’s competitive position.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.
















