Trent Van Epps, a former Ethereum Foundation contributor who spent five years coordinating core protocol development, has warned that Ethereum’s core development could slide into a funding crisis within three to nine months as a major client funding program lapses and the foundation winds down its spending. Van Epps argues that sustaining Ethereum’s network of more than ten client teams, researchers, and coordination groups costs roughly $30 million a year, and that the sources covering that figure are tightening at the same time, with no replacement mechanism announced.
Two Funding Streams Contract
The Client Incentive Program, a four-year effort that funded client teams through staking rewards, expired in April 2026 without a successor, according to Van Epps. Alongside that expiration, the Ethereum Foundation has begun executing a treasury plan announced in June 2025 that charts a glide path from 15% annual spending toward a 5% endowment baseline by 2030, tightening one of the ecosystem’s most consistent sources of support. Van noted thatThe foundation has reworked how it manages those reserves under the plan, converting ETH into stablecoins for predictable operational funding and deploying up to 70,000 ETH into staking to generate sustainable yield. Van Epps estimates the combined effect could open a “slow-burning funding crisis” within three to nine months. He frames the gap not as a one-time episode but as a symptom of structural problems in how the ecosystem gathers and allocates funding.“The ongoing execution of this plan will continue to have ripple effects throughout the ecosystem.”













