The amount of ETH that’s being used to secure the network recently crossed 30% of Ethereum’s circulating supply for the first time.
More than 30% of ETH’s circulating supply is now locked in staking contracts, per data from Validator Queue. The percent of supply staked continues to break new highs this month, climbing over 30% for the first time at the end of January.
As of today, Feb. 17, data shows that about 36.9 million ETH, or roughly 30.4% of total supply, is currently staked across nearly 967,000 active validators.
Meanwhile, the price of ETH rallied to new highs this summer, reaching nearly $5,000 in late August, but has since given back much of those gains, and is currently struggling to stay around $2,000.

The jump in staking, however, has also created a clear backlog for new validators. About 3.92 million ETH is currently sitting in the validator entry queue, waiting to be staked, and the wait time for staking has reached nearly 68 days.

Getting out of staking, however, is finally far easier. The exit queue is empty, although withdrawals still face an additional eight-day sweep delay before funds reach withdrawal addresses. This fall, the validator exit queue also faced congestion, and in September it took more than 45 days to exit Ethereum staking.
The network APR, or annual staking rewards, currently sits at around 2.84%. As for players, Lido remains the largest staking entity, controlling roughly 24% of all staked ETH, or about 8.7 million tokens, according to data from Dune Analytics. Centralized exchanges and centralized staking providers also account for a sizable share.

The data shows staking inflows rising through 2024 and early 2025, before turning negative later in 2025 as some participants began pulling ETH back out.
Last summer, alongside ETH’s price, the total value locked across liquid staking protocols — which let ETH holders stake their tokens while keeping funds liquid — rose to record highs above $85 billion, which extended through early October.
But after the Oct. 10 crash, liquid staking TVL began to drop and is currently sitting just below $40 billion.
