Ethereum’s next governance challenge may not be a hard fork or a technical roadmap dispute. It may be funding the people who keep the protocol moving.
Former Ethereum Foundation coordinator Trent Van Epps has warned that the ecosystem supporting Ethereum core development could face a funding gap within the next 3 to 9 months. The warning centers on the end of the Client Incentive Program, the Ethereum Foundation’s longer-term spending reduction strategy, and the need for more durable ecosystem funding outside the foundation itself.
This is not a claim that Ethereum is about to break. It is a warning about institutional sustainability. Ethereum has a deep bench of client teams, researchers, coordinators, and infrastructure contributors. The question is whether the ecosystem has a funding model that can support that work as the foundation deliberately reduces its central role.
TL;DR
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- Trent Van Epps has warned of a possible Ethereum core development funding gap in the next 3 to 9 months.
- The concern follows the April 2026 expiration of the four-year Client Incentive Program.
- Van Epps estimates that sustaining more than 10 client, research, and coordination teams requires about $30 million annually.
- The warning should be framed as a governance and funding issue, not an immediate technical crisis.
Why The Funding Question Matters
Ethereum is often discussed through price, staking yields, ETF flows, or layer-2 activity. But the network’s long-term value also depends on the people and teams maintaining the protocol itself. Client diversity, security research, upgrade coordination, and implementation work all require steady funding.
That work is not always commercially obvious. A DeFi app can capture fees. A layer-2 can earn sequencer revenue. A wallet or infrastructure company can build a business around users. Core protocol maintenance is different. It supports the whole ecosystem, but the benefits are shared broadly, which makes funding harder to coordinate.
Van Epps’ warning focuses on that gap. The Client Incentive Program helped support major client teams using validator-based rewards, but the four-year program expired in April 2026. Without a clear successor, some teams may need alternative funding sources to maintain the same level of capacity.
The Foundation Is Trying To Step Back
The Ethereum Foundation has also been pursuing what has been described as a “subtraction” strategy. The broad idea is that the foundation should not remain the permanent center of gravity for everything Ethereum needs. Instead, more responsibility should move to independent institutions, teams, and ecosystem-level funding mechanisms.
That may be healthy in the long run. Ethereum’s credibility has always come partly from its decentralization and resistance to single-organization control. But subtraction creates a transition problem. If the foundation spends less before new funding institutions are mature enough, important work can fall into the gap.
Van Epps has estimated that maintaining delivery capacity across more than 10 client, research, and coordination teams requires roughly $30 million in sustained annual funding. For a network with Ethereum’s market value, that number may look small. But decentralized funding is rarely just about total wealth. It is about coordination, legitimacy, accountability, and predictable commitments.
A Protocol Guild Moment
The obvious next question is whether institutions such as Protocol Guild can fill more of the gap. Protocol Guild has already become one of the most important attempts to fund Ethereum protocol contributors outside a traditional foundation model.
The challenge is scale and predictability. One-off grants can help. Token allocations can help. But core development needs stable, recurring support. Losing senior contributors, slowing client work, or underfunding coordination may not show up immediately in ETH’s price, but it can weaken the protocol’s resilience over time.
That is why this story matters for traders and long-term holders alike. Ethereum’s roadmap depends not only on ideas, but on the teams that implement them. If the ecosystem wants the foundation to step back, it needs credible funding institutions ready to step forward.
This article was written by the News Desk and edited by Samuel Rae.
This report is based on information from Trent Van Epps. at Trent Van Epps

