Ethereum Sees First Sustained Validator Exit Since Proof-of-Stake Shift

Ethereum’s validator count has slipped back to April 2024 levels, with exit queue wait times hitting new record highs.

Ethereum’s daily active validator count has fallen about 10% since July to a level not seen since April 2024, according to data from Beaconchain. After a steady rise to new highs, the recent decline would be the first one of this size since the network switched from proof-of-work to proof-of-stake consensus mechanism in September 2022.

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Daily active Ethereum validators. Source: Beaconchain

The number of daily active validators recently fell below the 1 million mark for the first time since April 28, 2024, and is standing at 999,203 as of today, Nov. 11.

Validators are the operators that run Ethereum’s software, staking ETH in order to process transactions and keep the network secure in exchange for rewards. In the event that they decide to stop validating the network and fully withdraw their staked ETH, they must go through an exit queue — a built-in safety feature that limits how many can withdraw at once to avoid disrupting the network. After exiting, their funds become withdrawable, and available to cash out.

Clemens Scarpatetti, CEO of CryptoCrew Validators, an Ethereum staking operator, told The Defiant in commentary that the drop in active va

lidations reflects a “mix of cyclical and structural factors.” Scarpatetti explained further:

“We’re likely seeing some profit taking as long-term stakers unwind positions after a strong Q2-Q3 ETH performance, alongside larger-scale withdrawals from liquid staking providers like Lido, whose exit queues have recently reached significant highs.”

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ETH 1-year price chart. Source: CoinGecko

As of press time, ETH is trading at $3,470, down roughly 25% from late July and mid-August, when it briefly hit a new all-time high of $4,946, surpassing its November 2021 record. After a choppy year, ETH is up just 4% since January.

While the rally this summer brought relief for long-term holders, it also pushed the validator exit queue to unprecedented new highs as staking operators rushed to unstake their funds to sell at profit.

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Ethereum validator entry and exit wait time. Source: ValidatorQueue

According to data from ValidatorQueue, which tracks ETH validator activity, it currently takes Ethereum validators approximately 37 days to withdraw staked ETH, up from just one day back in May.

However, the validator entry wait time has also spiked in recent months, with about 1.2 million ETH currently waiting to be staked, and a wait time of 22 days.

Validator Consolidation

Among those watching the shift is Alon Muroch, founder and CEO of SSV Labs, a crypto staking infrastructure provider. Speaking with The Defiant, Muroch said the prolonged Ethereum exit queue was “a predictable consequence of how validator exits operate at scale.”

He noted that Kiln, a large institutional staking service with over $18 billion in staked tokens across different networks, began withdrawing nearly all its validators on Ethereum in early September due to security concerns, as The Defiant previously reported. That figure represents about 4% of total staked ETH or roughly $7 billion.

According to Muroch, large institutions often manage hundreds or thousands of validators. When they exit or consolidate under Ethereum’s new MaxEB rule from the recent Pectra upgrade — which lets them combine up to 2,048 ETH into a single validator instead of running dozens of smaller ones — it can trigger a chain reaction that backs up the queue for others.

Muroch noted that as one large MaxEB validator replaces dozens of smaller ones, the current consolidation could make future mass exits more efficient.

“Real decentralization isn’t just about how many validators exist, it’s about truly independent operators,” Muroch added.

Falling Yields

Staking profitability has also been at play. Meir Rosenschein, director of product for blockchain and AI at DcentraLab, told The Defiant that another factor in the decline was staking yields dropping, and borrowing costs rising, making leveraged staking unprofitable.

As of press time, annualized staking yield for Ethereum stands at approximately 2.9% APR, down from a record 8.6% in May 2023.

“Over the next period validator participation will likely keep shifting toward larger professional operators. Pectra’s 2,048 ETH consolidation makes that easier. The exit queue probably stays slow but stable while withdrawals clear,” Rosenschein explained.

He noted that overall, the validator landscape “looks like it’s trending toward fewer bigger more optimized participants.”

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ETH validators by ETH staked. Source: Dune Analytics

Data from blockchain analytics platform Dune shows that at press time, decentralized staking protocol Lido leads the market with over 8.4 million ETH staked across 265,000 validators, holding more than a 23% share. Centralized exchanges Binance and Coinbase follow, accounting for roughly 9.2% and 6.5% of staked ETH, respectively.

Shaul Rejwan, managing partner at Masterkey VC, sees the current decline not as a structural weakness, but as a “natural rotation of capital and compute.” He added in commentary to The Defiant that the current dynamic represents “validator churn, not capitulation,” reflecting a “maturing market optimizing for efficiency.”

So for now, staking yields and participation may stay uneven while withdrawals work through the system. But over time, consolidation and new distributed validator technology could make the network leaner and more efficient, even if fewer operators remain active.

Source: https://thedefiant.io/news/blockchains/ethereum-sees-first-sustained-validator-count-decline-since-the-merge-pos-upgrade