According to official blog posts from the Ethereum Foundation cited by multiple media outlets, EF announced on June 23rd the completion of an organizational restructuring that lasted several months. The restructuring involved a reduction of 54 staff members, accounting for approximately 20% of the total workforce, and reorganized the existing teams into five core work clusters. EF is not an ordinary crypto company; it has long played a role in Ethereum protocol research, development coordination, and ecosystem support. For investors and developers, the organizational contraction affects not just headcount, but also the pace of future Ethereum upgrades, the direction of ecosystem funding, and the Foundation's stance amidst institutional adoption and regulatory pressure.
The official explanation for this adjustment is not simply cost-cutting. EF describes it as the implementation of the March 2026 "Mandate" and the June 2025 "Treasury Management Policy," with the goal of making the Foundation more streamlined and placing "self-sovereignty" at its core. In the context of Ethereum, this points toward users being as independent from intermediaries as possible, and free from censorship or forced custody of assets and data.
However, the timing itself carries tension. Over the past six months, EF has experienced the departure of several senior leaders and governance adjustments. Concurrently, the external market has been discussing ecosystem fragmentation, L2 competition, funding support, and the efficiency of roadmap execution. While the official narrative focuses on mission alignment, external observers are more concerned with whether this indicates EF is retrenching under pressure and whether it will change the pace of Ethereum's R&D and ecosystem support.
After Laying Off 20%, EF Divides Its Organization into Five Work Clusters
After the restructuring, EF's core work is divided into five clusters: Protocol, Access, User, Community, and Institutional, corresponding to the protocol layer, access layer, user layer, community layer, and institutional layer. Additionally, EF retains support clusters such as Operations and Management.
The Protocol layer remains the part closest to Ethereum's core roadmap, responsible for protocol enhancement and long-term research. Key areas include mitigating harmful MEV, addressing privileged order flow, post-quantum security, zkEVM, L1 privacy, among others. EF's most critical technical roles are still positioned at the underlying protocol level—making Ethereum more resistant to corruption, control, or censorship—rather than shifting toward short-term productization.
The Access layer emphasizes whether ordinary users can truly and permissionlessly use Ethereum. EF's announcement mentions the "zero option" principle, meaning that even if numerous wallets, node services, custodians, or institutional gateways emerge in the market, users should still retain a path for reading, writing, proving, and exiting that does not require trusting intermediaries. This relates to whether Ethereum remains an independently verifiable, exit-capable foundational layer, or merely becomes a settlement network packaged by financial institutions.
The User, Community, and Institutional layers reorganize EF's previously dispersed external connections. The User layer is responsible for bringing real user pain points back into the decision-making process. The Community layer maintains EF's independent image and connects with broader allies in open source, privacy, civil liberties, etc. The Institutional layer focuses on financial institution, enterprise, and government scenarios, promoting integration methods more aligned with Ethereum's values while monitoring regulatory changes.
EF did not disclose the headcount, budget allocation, or specific KPIs for each cluster in this announcement, nor did it publish the list of laid-off employees. Based on the "54 people accounting for roughly 20%" figure, the pre-restructuring headcount was approximately 270, but no precise official figure was provided.
CROPS: From Value Slogan to EF's Organizational Principle
The key term behind this restructuring is CROPS. EF defined it in the "Mandate" as several irreplaceable attributes: Censorship Resistance, Open and Free, Privacy, Security. Concurrently, the official narrative emphasizes anti-capture—that the network cannot be easily controlled by a single nation, institution, exchange, validator group, or financial intermediary.
These terms may sound like values, but they will directly influence what kind of infrastructure Ethereum is built into. Censorship resistance relates to whether transactions and applications can be arbitrarily excluded. Open and free relates to whether core code, standards, and participation pathways are transparent. Privacy and security determine Ethereum's ability to host more financial and non-financial activities.
EF had already brought these principles to the forefront in the "Mandate" released in March 2026. This round of layoffs and restructuring essentially translates these value statements into organizational structure. The Protocol and Access layers take on more defensive tasks: one guards the underlying protocol, the other guards the user's entry point from being locked in by intermediaries. The existence of the Institutional layer indicates that EF does not reject the use of Ethereum by enterprises, financial institutions, and governments, but hopes such usage minimizes the sacrifice of CROPS principles.
This also explains why the announcement did not center on short-term market performance, ETH price, or ecosystem commercialization. EF attempts to emphasize that its reorganization is not aimed at chasing a particular market cycle or a specific type of institutional adoption, but rather at redefining its boundaries amid crypto financialization, L2 fragmentation, and regulatory pressure.
Providing Severance and Transition Support, But Budget Allocation Undisclosed
For departing employees, EF stated it will provide severance packages exceeding local legal standards. Specifically, the standard is one month's salary per year of service at EF, compared against local requirements, with the higher standard being applied. Departing employees will also receive assistance for internal ecosystem transition roles and a small transition grant.
This arrangement conveys two signals. First, the layoffs were not a sudden, one-time action but part of a restructuring process over the past few months. Second, EF hopes some of the departing talent will remain within the Ethereum ecosystem, moving to other teams, projects, or public goods work, rather than leaving the ecosystem entirely.
The budget issue remains a key point of external uncertainty. The Treasury Management Policy released in June 2025 proposed that EF's current annual operational expenditure target is 15% of the total treasury, with a 2.5-year operational buffer maintained, and a plan to gradually reduce this to a long-term baseline of 5% over the next five years. The June 23rd restructuring announcement itself did not list the budget, KPIs, or subsequent fund allocation for each cluster, nor did it frame the layoffs as an emergency action driven by financial crisis.
For the market, the distinction lies in this: if this is an orderly resource reallocation, the impact might be more evident in changes to project priorities. If it's driven by more significant budget compression, ecosystem grants, research positions, and long-term public goods funding could face more direct impacts. Currently, the confirmed facts remain primarily limited to the layoff scale, organizational structure changes, and EF's commitment to disclosing more details later.
Officials Talk of Mission Focus, the Market Sees Governance Pressure
The tone of EF's announcement is relatively positive: a lighter, more focused organization, support for those leaving, and a new structure that will help the Foundation better fulfill its long-term mission. However, external reports generally interpret it within a different timeline. Over the past six months, the Ethereum Foundation has undergone leadership changes, with several high-level executives departing or changing roles. Discussions about its governance efficiency and strategic direction have persisted in the market.
This contrast is at the core of the tension in this news. The Ethereum ecosystem is growing larger, with increasing L2s, restaking, DeFi, institutional custody, and regulatory interfaces. On one hand, EF must avoid being seen as a "centralized manager." On the other hand, the market expects clearer direction on the roadmap, public goods funding, and external communication. After a 20% staff reduction, this contradiction will not disappear; instead, it may be amplified.
In the short term, it's difficult to simply label this restructuring as bearish or bullish for ETH. There is no evidence that EF is forced into emergency layoffs due to depleted funds, nor is there proof that the new five-cluster structure will necessarily improve development efficiency. More pragmatic questions are: which research and engineering project priorities will rise under the new structure, which public goods funding will be compressed, and whether the Institutional layer will change EF's approach to regulation and traditional finance.
EF indicated that over the coming weeks and months, it will continue to disclose work changes within each cluster and new methods of interacting with the ecosystem. For investors and developers, the value statements in the announcement are clear enough. What's harder to judge is where the resources will ultimately flow: whether protocol upgrades will accelerate, whether long-term research will be preserved, whether ecosystem grants will change, and whether departing talent will stay within Ethereum or move to other chains and crypto projects.







