Nye aka tugharia asusu peeji a

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I na elele peeji a na asusu Bekee maka na anyi atugharibeghi ya. Nyere anyi aka tugharia asusu odinaya a.

How to stake your ETH

Stake your ETH to become an Ethereum validator

Staking is a public good for the Ethereum ecosystem. You can help secure the network and earn rewards in the process.
Image of the Rhino mascot for the eth2 launchpad.

Staking

Staking is the act of depositing 32 ETH to activate validator software. As a validator you’ll be responsible for storing data, processing transactions, and adding new blocks to the blockchain. This will keep Ethereum secure for everyone and earn you new ETH in the process. This process, known as proof-of-stake, is being introduced by the Beacon Chain. More on the Beacon Chain

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Rewards

Rewards are given for actions that help the network reach consensus. You'll get rewards for batching transactions into a new block or checking the work of other validators because that's what keeps the chain running securely.

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Risks

Although you can earn rewards for doing work that benefits the network, you can lose ETH for malicious actions, going offline, and failing to validate.

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Requirements

You'll need 32 ETH to become a full validator or some ETH to join a staking pool. You'll also need to run an 'Eth1' or Mainnet client. The launchpad will walk you through the process and hardware requirements. Alternatively, you can use a backend API.

View backend APIs

How to stake

It all depends on how much you are willing to stake. You'll need 32 to become a full validator, but it is possible to stake less.

How much are you willing to stake?

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32 ETH
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Less than 32 ETH

Withdraws won't be live right away

You won't be able to withdraw your stake until future upgrades are deployed. Withdraws will be available in a minor upgrade following the merge of Mainnet with the Beacon Chain. More on the merge

Stake solo and run a validator

To begin the staking process, you’ll need to use the Eth2 launchpad. This will walk you through all the setup. Part of staking is running an Eth2 client, which is a local copy of the blockchain. This can take a while to download onto your computer.

Start staking

Check the deposit address

If you’ve already followed the setup instructions on the launchpad, you’ll know you need to send a transaction to the staking deposit contract. We recommend you check the address very carefully. You can find the official address on ethereum.org and a number of other trusted sites.

Check deposit address

Join the staker community

r/ethstaker is a community for everyone to discuss staking on Ethereum – join for advice, support, and to talk all thing staking.

Proof-of-stake explained

Staking is what you need to do to become a validator in a proof-of-stake system. This is a consensus mechanism that is going to replace the proof-of-work system currently in place. Consensus mechanisms are what keep blockchains like Ethereum secure and decentralized. More on consensus mechanisms

Proof-of-stake helps secure the network in a number of ways:

Your ETH is at stake

Because you have to stake your ETH in order to validate transactions and create new blocks, you can lose it if you decide to try and cheat the system.

More validators, more security

In a blockchain like Ethereum it is possible to censor and reorder transactions to suit you if you control a majority of the network. But, to control a majority of the network, you need a majority of validators, and for this you’d need to control a majority of the ETH in the system – that’s a lot! This amount of ETH grows every time a new validator enters the system, bolstering the security of the network. Proof-of-work, the security model proof-of-stake will replace, requires the validators (miners) to have specialist hardware and lots of physical space – entering the system as a miner is difficult so security against majority attacks doesn't increase as much. Proof-of-stake doesn't have these requirements, which should grow the network (and its resistance to majority attacks) to sizes that aren't possible with proof of work.

Proof-of-stake and Eth2 upgrades

  • Proof-of-stake is managed by the Beacon Chain.
  • Ethereum will have a proof-of-stake Beacon Chain and a proof-of-work Mainnet for the forseeable future. Mainnet is the Ethereum we've been using for years.
  • During this time, stakers will be adding new blocks to the Beacon Chain but not processing mainnet transactions.
  • Ethereum will fully transition to a proof-of-stake system once the Ethereum mainnet merges with the Beacon Chain.
  • A minor upgrade will follow to enable withdraw of staked funds.

Benefits of staking to Ethereum

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More sustainable

Validators don’t need energy-intensive computers in order to participate in a proof-of-stake system – just a laptop or smart phone. This will make Ethereum better for the environment.

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More accessible

With easier hardware requirements and the opportunity to pool if you don’t have 32 ETH, more people will be able to join the network. This will make Ethereum more decentralized and secure by decreasing the attack surface area.

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Unlocks sharding

Sharding is only possible with a proof-of-stake system. Sharding a proof-of-work system would dilute the amount of computing power needed to corrupt the network, making it easier for malicious miners to control shards. This isn’t the case with randomly-assigned stakers in proof of stake.

More on sharding