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07/22/2025 - Updated on 07/23/2025
Liquid staking platforms, led by Lido Finance, now control a growing share of Ethereum’s validator set, and as that concentration creeps toward the critical 33% threshold, the assumptions underpinning the network’s security model are quietly being tested.
Ethereum’s proof-of-stake system is built on assumptions about distribution.
At roughly one-third of total stake, a coordinated validator set gains the ability to:
This isn’t full control. It’s something quieter and potentially more dangerous.
Because it allows influence without outright takeover.
That’s why the 33% threshold matters. It’s not about domination. It’s about leverage.
Liquid staking solved a real problem.
Running a validator requires technical skill and a minimum stake, which limits participation. Platforms like Lido Finance changed that by allowing users to stake smaller amounts while retaining liquidity.
The result:
From a user perspective, it’s an upgrade.
From a network perspective, it’s a concentration engine.
The shift happens gradually.
Users don’t think in terms of decentralization as they think in terms of simplicity and returns.
So they choose:
Over time, those choices compound.
Stake flows toward a handful of dominant platforms. Independent validators don’t disappear but they become a smaller percentage of the total.
That’s how decentralization erodes not through failure, but through preference.
The 33% threat isn’t about one entity suddenly taking control.
It’s about a small group collectively approaching a level of influence that was never intended to be concentrated.
Liquid staking providers don’t operate in isolation:
This creates a system where influence can align, even without explicit coordination.
And that’s where the risk becomes difficult to measure.
On paper, the solution seems simple: encourage more decentralization.
In practice, it’s not.
Because liquid staking is winning for a reason:
Any alternative that sacrifices those advantages struggles to compete.
This creates a paradox.
The very mechanism that increases participation also concentrates it.
And reversing that trend means asking users to choose complexity over convenience which rarely scales.
If liquid staking providers collectively approach or exceed the 33% threshold, the risks become more tangible:
This doesn’t mean Ethereum breaks.
It means the assumptions behind its security model start to weaken.
Ethereum has always positioned itself as a decentralized platform.
But decentralization isn’t static as it’s maintained through distribution.
If stake becomes too concentrated, the network doesn’t stop functioning.
It just starts functioning differently.
Less like a distributed system, and more like a coordinated one.
The 33% threat isn’t loud. There’s no obvious failure point, no dramatic collapse.
Instead, it’s a gradual shift:
That’s what makes it difficult to react to.
By the time it’s widely recognized, it may already be embedded in how the network operates.
Liquid staking isn’t going away.
The question is whether Ethereum can adapt its structure to account for it or whether it will slowly reshape itself around it.
Because if current trends continue, the network won’t be overtaken.
It will be optimized into a form where control is less visible, but more concentrated.
And that may be the most subtle and most important shift of all.
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