Ethereum Foundation Q1 2026 grants double down on ZK, cryptography, and core protocol infrastructure

Ethereum Foundation’s Q1 2026 grants pour into ZK research, core clients, validator security, and public-goods infra, signaling long-term conviction in cryptography-first scaling.
The Ethereum Foundation has released its latest Q1 2026 allocation report, highlighting fresh grants and ecosystem support across cryptography, zero‑knowledge proofs (ZK), protocol security, and core infrastructure. The funding continues a long‑running strategy of backing deep technical work on Ethereum’s underlying stack rather than short‑term speculative themes.
At the protocol and client layer, the Foundation is directing resources to execution‑client optimizations for Geth and Erigon, aiming to improve performance, syncing, and resource efficiency for node operators. On the consensus side, the Lighthouse client is receiving support for upgrades tied to the post‑Pectra environment, alongside new network‑monitoring tools designed to track chain health, latency, and potential attack patterns after the upgrade. Additional grants cover HSM‑based key‑management solutions, the validator‑security tool Vero, and the DISC‑NG node‑discovery mechanism, all focused on hardening validator operations and improving peer discovery under adversarial conditions.
In cryptography and ZK, the Q1 round continues to fund work at the primitive and proof‑system level. This includes deeper analysis of the Poseidon hash function used across many zkSNARK and zkVM implementations, research into potential Gröbner basis attacks on algebraic structures relevant to ZK systems, and exploration of quantum‑resistant and homomorphic mixed‑encryption schemes. The Foundation is also backing formal verification of a RISC‑V‑based zkVM, aiming to increase assurance around low‑level proving infrastructure that rollups and privacy protocols increasingly rely on.
On the developer‑ecosystem side, the grants list features an upgrade to the BuidlGuidl education system, intended to streamline onboarding and hands‑on learning for Ethereum developers. Funding for ERC standard community‑building efforts, a WalletConnect clear‑signature library, and the Open Creator Rails toolchain is aimed at improving security and clarity around signing flows while lowering friction for creators and application developers. For scaling analytics, L2BEAT continues to receive support to provide transparency and risk analysis for Layer 2 networks, which the Foundation positions as critical shared data infrastructure for the rollup ecosystem.
Beyond core protocol and ZK, the Q1 allocations also extend to privacy, identity, and governance‑related public goods. Supported projects include privacy technologies such as Tor integration and a Privacy Pool SDK, upgrades to the did:ethr decentralized‑identity standard, DAO‑governance research, and other experimental public‑goods initiatives that span the protocol and application layers. According to the Foundation’s report, the overall funding package reflects Ethereum’s continued commitment to “cryptography + ZK + protocol engineering” as the three core pillars for future multi‑layer scaling and institution‑grade application deployment on the network.