In brief
- Roughly 3.4 million ETH is waiting to enter Ethereum’s validator set, creating one of the longest staking queues since the network transitioned to proof-of-stake.
- Anecdotal industry feedback suggests major corporates and exchanges are driving much of the demand as they seek yield on large crypto holdings.
- The backlog marks a sharp shift from late 2025, when the validator exit queue swelled to nearly 2.7 million ETH before steadily unwinding.
Ethereum’s validator queue has surged to unprecedented levels as large investors, including corporates and crypto exchanges, rush to stake the token rather than sell into recent market rallies.
Roughly 3.4 million ETH is now waiting to enter Ethereum’s validator set, creating a backlog estimated at about 60 days, according to data from ValidatorQueue.com.
The figure marks a sharp rise from roughly 904,000 ETH in early January, underscoring a wave of demand for staking across the network.
The buildup suggests that some of the market’s largest players are choosing to lock up supply for yield, a move analysts say reflects a more defensive stance among institutional crypto investors.
“The staking entry queue on Ethereum matters because this is a sign that the next wave of long-term investors are choosing to lock supply for yield,” Pav Hundal, lead analyst at Swyftx, told Decrypt.
Ethereum validators must stake 32 ETH to participate in securing the network, and new validators can only join at a limited rate.
When demand to stake exceeds that rate, a queue forms, sometimes stretching weeks or months before new validators can activate.
Last year's Pectra upgrade now allows large operators to consolidate larger amounts of stake into fewer validators.
Hundal said anecdotal feedback from industry contacts suggests the current wave of demand is largely driven by major corporates and exchanges seeking to generate yield on idle crypto holdings.
“Large investors like this have PhDs in making their assets work hard, so we should take this signal seriously,” he said.
The surge in new staking demand follows a period last year when the validator exit queue spiked sharply, peaking near 2.7 million ETH in September before steadily falling toward zero by early 2026.
The reversal indicates that while some investors withdrew staking positions in 2025, the current market environment is drawing capital back into Ethereum’s validator ecosystem.
For institutional investors holding large amounts of ETH on balance sheets or exchange reserves, staking offers a relatively low-risk way to generate yield while maintaining exposure to the token’s price.
Hundal said broader narratives around Ethereum’s potential role in payments infrastructure and AI-linked applications may also be contributing to the renewed appetite.
“People are buying the payments and AI narrative around Ethereum right now,” he said. “That does set the stage for ETH to potentially outperform as its narrative continues to get stronger.”

