Ethereum validator exit queue climbs to over $3 billion in ETH amid increased stake withdrawals
Quick Take Ethereum’s validator exit queue has bounced back to over 670,000 ETH. Exiting validators enter a line that limits withdrawal speed. Exiting does not mean immediate selling. The ETH may be restaked, used in DeFi, or held in custody.
Ethereum’s validator exit queue has climbed to 671,900 ETH, or roughly $3.1 billion, as withdrawals stack up after the market’s summer rally, according to The Block’s data dashboard .
The surge follows weeks of rising exits that The Block previously flagged when the queue first pushed past 521,000 ETH, worth $1.9 billion at the time, and then the highest since early 2024. Since then, both the size of the queue and the expected processing time have accelerated. Data from validatorqueue.com estimated the wait time at roughly 12 days, up from nine days last month, as withdrawal requests have quickly accumulated since mid-July.
However, the exit size considerably outstrips the entry demand this time. About 105,620 ETH, currently valued at $480 million, is queued to be staked. The previous figure was approximately $1.3 billion or 359,500 ETH, despite Ether trading lower last month.
Why the queue is swelling
Speculators are debating why validators are unstaking ETH en masse. A pseudonymous DeFi analyst who goes by Ignas pointed to several overlapping factors behind the spike.
The expert surmised that unwinding leveraged staking loops may be one reason. Traders who staked to receive liquid staking tokens like stETH and then borrowed against them appear to be deleveraging as funding and borrow costs rose, increasing exit requests.
Ignas also mentioned LST depeg jitters and arbitrage. A softening stETH/ETH ratio could have encouraged network participants to unstake, rotate between stETH and ETH, and harvest basis spreads, which would raise exits while reducing looped exposure. He also noted that Lido, EthFi, and Coinbase appeared among the largest recent sources of unstaked ETH, consistent with a broad de-risking by LST users.
Positioning ahead of potential staking products might be another driver, Ignas said in an X thread. In May, the SEC clarified that staking does not violate federal securities rules, paving the way for funds that invest portions of assets under management into onchain yield contracts. Some stakers may be repositioning in anticipation of U.S. products that could change how institutions access staking yield , the analysts argued.
With prices pushing back toward record territory, it’s also possible some validators are simply locking in gains, even as ETF and corporate-treasury demand absorb incoming supply.
What the exit queue is (and is not)
The exit queue is a throttle on validator withdrawals. When many validators opt to stop validating at once, they enter a line that limits how fast funds become withdrawable and then swept to withdrawal addresses. Crucially, exiting does not mean immediate selling—some ETH may be restaked later, redeployed in DeFi, or held in custody—and sweep timing can add days beyond the queue itself.
This latest spike in exits arrives as ether approaches prior highs and as spot ETH ETFs continue to attract capital, a backdrop that can offset near-term supply from withdrawals. Still, a record-long exit line is usually seen as a clear sign that deleveraging and risk management are back in focus for parts of the staking ecosystem.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
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