By the end of 2025, the Ethereum network reaches a critical turning point: the “entering queue” of validators reverses and surpasses the “exiting queue.” The amount of funds staking on Ethereum and attempting to become validators has far exceeded the amount of funds seeking to unstake and exit, marking a gradual easing of the months-long selling pressure.
(Background: Is Ethereum signaling a bottom before a sharp rise? Staking queue surges by 740,000 ETH, double the exit volume)
(Additional context: Tom Lee predicts Ethereum will surge to $9,000 early next year, and Bitcoin could reach $200,000 in 2026)
Table of Contents
The reversal of the Ethereum validator queue
What is the validator queue? Why is it important?
How will the validator queue change in 2025?
Four core drivers behind the December reversal
Summary
As 2025 draws to a close, the Ethereum network experiences a key turning point: the “entering queue” of validators reverses and exceeds the “exiting queue.”
This means that, after months of market turbulence, the amount of funds staking to become Ethereum validators has significantly surpassed the amount of funds seeking to unstake and exit.
This change is not just a numerical shift but a market sentiment and network fundamentals indicator, signaling that the prolonged selling pressure is gradually easing. It also suggests that, driven by renewed institutional confidence, network upgrades like Pectra, and deleveraging in DeFi, Ethereum is entering a new cycle of enhanced security and capital accumulation.
The reversal of the Ethereum validator queue
According to the latest data from the Ethereum Validator Queue, approximately 739,824 ETH are currently waiting in line to enter the network, with an estimated wait time of 12 days and 20 hours; the exit queue holds only 349,867 ETH, which would clear in about 6 days.
Additionally, the total staked ETH on Ethereum is about 35.5 million, accounting for 29.27% of the total supply, with active validators reaching 983,600.
What is the validator queue? Why is it important?
Under Ethereum’s proof-of-stake (PoS) mechanism, to ensure consensus stability, nodes cannot join or leave at will but are regulated through the “Churn Limit” mechanism.
Currently, the maximum number of validators that can be activated or exited per epoch (about 6 minutes and 24 seconds) is set at 256 ETH, equivalent to a processing capacity of approximately 57,600 ETH per day.
Entry Queue: The queue for staking 32 ETH to apply for becoming a validator. Growth in this queue indicates strong staking demand and long-term capital confidence.
Exit Queue: The queue for requesting to withdraw funds. Growth here usually signals selling pressure, liquidity needs, or deleveraging behavior.
Therefore, the validator queue is not only an indicator of network health but also a barometer of market sentiment.
( How will the validator queue change in 2025?
Throughout 2025, the Ethereum validator queue experienced significant fluctuations:
First half to autumn: Multiple peaks in the exit queue, mainly due to institutional rotations, profit-taking, DeFi deleveraging (such as Aave’s soaring lending rates leading to stETH liquidation), and security incidents like Kiln exiting all Ethereum validator nodes in September. By mid-September, the exit queue peaked at 2.67 million ETH, with a wait time of up to 46 days.
September-October: The “entry queue” briefly overtook the exit queue but was soon dominated again by the “exit queue.”
November: The “entry queue” grew again to over 1.5 million ETH, while the “exit queue” temporarily reached over 2.5 million ETH.
End of December: The “entry queue” reversed again, with about 739,824 ETH waiting to enter the network, and only 349,867 ETH in the exit queue.
) Four core drivers behind the December reversal
This reversal is not accidental but the result of combined forces from capital, technology, and macroeconomic environments:
Large-scale staking by treasury companies like BitMine
Just two days before the reversal (December 25-27), BitMine staked a total of 342,560 ETH (roughly $1 billion), directly driving the queue reversal.
Moreover, BitMine has previously announced plans to launch dedicated staking infrastructure—MAVAN (Made in America Validator Network)—in Q1 2026, demonstrating its long-term commitment to Ethereum staking ecosystem.
Meanwhile, another major treasury, SharpLink, has completed staking nearly 100% of its ETH holdings, further fueling capital inflows.
Despite current challenges in the crypto treasury sector, with some institutions slowing ETH accumulation or even cashing out (like ETHZilla), the large-scale deployments by industry leaders like BitMine and SharpLink largely stabilize Ethereum’s staking ecosystem.
Pectra upgrade enhancing staking experience
The Pectra upgrade implemented in May 2025 introduced key improvements via EIP-7251: increasing the maximum effective validator balance from 32 ETH to 2,048 ETH, enabling reward compounding and validator consolidation. This reduces operational costs for institutions managing thousands of validator nodes and facilitates large capital entry.
Kiln re-staking reopening
After a security incident in September 2025, Kiln exited validators en masse. While it’s unclear when Kiln resumed staking, data from Beaconcha.in shows Kiln now accounts for 1.68% of the Ethereum staking ecosystem.
DeFi deleveraging nearing completion
In June and July, rising Aave lending rates forced liquidation of stETH leveraged strategies, causing phased selling pressure. Recently, as deleveraging has gradually cleared, related exit demands have diminished, with market inflows dominating.
Institutional buy-the-dip activity
The market has been adjusting for days; some institutions are optimistic about ETH’s long-term value. Trend Research plans to continue adding ETH with $1 billion. On December 25, Ai Yi Jing confirmed with Jack Yi that Trend Research’s ETH holdings since November cost around $3,150 per ETH, with a current unrealized loss of about $143 million on 645,000 ETH. After an additional $1 billion investment, the average cost of ETH is expected to be around $3,050.
( Summary
The reversal of the Ethereum validator “entering queue” surpassing the “exiting queue” marks the initial formation of a net inflow of staking since July. This change is more than just a numerical shift; it is a key signal of market confidence rebuilding. Of course, whether this leading trend can be sustained remains to be seen.
Although Ethereum spot ETFs have not yet shown significant net inflows, on-chain fundamentals are clearly improving. As Joseph Chalom, Co-CEO of SharpLink Gaming, stated this month, the surge in stablecoins, tokenized RWA, and growing interest from sovereign wealth funds could drive Ethereum’s TVL to increase tenfold by 2026.
Standing at the tail end of 2025, is Ethereum already preparing for the surge in 2026? The answer will be revealed by time.
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Ethereum staking market shows a net inflow again! Entering the queue far exceeds exits, a prelude to the 2026 bull market?
By the end of 2025, the Ethereum network reaches a critical turning point: the “entering queue” of validators reverses and surpasses the “exiting queue.” The amount of funds staking on Ethereum and attempting to become validators has far exceeded the amount of funds seeking to unstake and exit, marking a gradual easing of the months-long selling pressure.
(Background: Is Ethereum signaling a bottom before a sharp rise? Staking queue surges by 740,000 ETH, double the exit volume)
(Additional context: Tom Lee predicts Ethereum will surge to $9,000 early next year, and Bitcoin could reach $200,000 in 2026)
Table of Contents
As 2025 draws to a close, the Ethereum network experiences a key turning point: the “entering queue” of validators reverses and exceeds the “exiting queue.”
This means that, after months of market turbulence, the amount of funds staking to become Ethereum validators has significantly surpassed the amount of funds seeking to unstake and exit.
This change is not just a numerical shift but a market sentiment and network fundamentals indicator, signaling that the prolonged selling pressure is gradually easing. It also suggests that, driven by renewed institutional confidence, network upgrades like Pectra, and deleveraging in DeFi, Ethereum is entering a new cycle of enhanced security and capital accumulation.
The reversal of the Ethereum validator queue
According to the latest data from the Ethereum Validator Queue, approximately 739,824 ETH are currently waiting in line to enter the network, with an estimated wait time of 12 days and 20 hours; the exit queue holds only 349,867 ETH, which would clear in about 6 days.
Additionally, the total staked ETH on Ethereum is about 35.5 million, accounting for 29.27% of the total supply, with active validators reaching 983,600.
What is the validator queue? Why is it important?
Under Ethereum’s proof-of-stake (PoS) mechanism, to ensure consensus stability, nodes cannot join or leave at will but are regulated through the “Churn Limit” mechanism.
Currently, the maximum number of validators that can be activated or exited per epoch (about 6 minutes and 24 seconds) is set at 256 ETH, equivalent to a processing capacity of approximately 57,600 ETH per day.
Therefore, the validator queue is not only an indicator of network health but also a barometer of market sentiment.
( How will the validator queue change in 2025?
Throughout 2025, the Ethereum validator queue experienced significant fluctuations:
) Four core drivers behind the December reversal
This reversal is not accidental but the result of combined forces from capital, technology, and macroeconomic environments:
Large-scale staking by treasury companies like BitMine
Just two days before the reversal (December 25-27), BitMine staked a total of 342,560 ETH (roughly $1 billion), directly driving the queue reversal.
Moreover, BitMine has previously announced plans to launch dedicated staking infrastructure—MAVAN (Made in America Validator Network)—in Q1 2026, demonstrating its long-term commitment to Ethereum staking ecosystem.
Meanwhile, another major treasury, SharpLink, has completed staking nearly 100% of its ETH holdings, further fueling capital inflows.
Despite current challenges in the crypto treasury sector, with some institutions slowing ETH accumulation or even cashing out (like ETHZilla), the large-scale deployments by industry leaders like BitMine and SharpLink largely stabilize Ethereum’s staking ecosystem.
Pectra upgrade enhancing staking experience
The Pectra upgrade implemented in May 2025 introduced key improvements via EIP-7251: increasing the maximum effective validator balance from 32 ETH to 2,048 ETH, enabling reward compounding and validator consolidation. This reduces operational costs for institutions managing thousands of validator nodes and facilitates large capital entry.
Kiln re-staking reopening
After a security incident in September 2025, Kiln exited validators en masse. While it’s unclear when Kiln resumed staking, data from Beaconcha.in shows Kiln now accounts for 1.68% of the Ethereum staking ecosystem.
DeFi deleveraging nearing completion
In June and July, rising Aave lending rates forced liquidation of stETH leveraged strategies, causing phased selling pressure. Recently, as deleveraging has gradually cleared, related exit demands have diminished, with market inflows dominating.
Institutional buy-the-dip activity
The market has been adjusting for days; some institutions are optimistic about ETH’s long-term value. Trend Research plans to continue adding ETH with $1 billion. On December 25, Ai Yi Jing confirmed with Jack Yi that Trend Research’s ETH holdings since November cost around $3,150 per ETH, with a current unrealized loss of about $143 million on 645,000 ETH. After an additional $1 billion investment, the average cost of ETH is expected to be around $3,050.
( Summary
The reversal of the Ethereum validator “entering queue” surpassing the “exiting queue” marks the initial formation of a net inflow of staking since July. This change is more than just a numerical shift; it is a key signal of market confidence rebuilding. Of course, whether this leading trend can be sustained remains to be seen.
Although Ethereum spot ETFs have not yet shown significant net inflows, on-chain fundamentals are clearly improving. As Joseph Chalom, Co-CEO of SharpLink Gaming, stated this month, the surge in stablecoins, tokenized RWA, and growing interest from sovereign wealth funds could drive Ethereum’s TVL to increase tenfold by 2026.
Standing at the tail end of 2025, is Ethereum already preparing for the surge in 2026? The answer will be revealed by time.
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