Receive maximum rewards directly from the protocol for keeping your validator properly functioning and online
Run home hardware and personally add to the security and decentralization of the Ethereum network
Remove trust, and never give up control of the keys to your funds
What is solo staking?
Solo staking is the act of running an Ethereum node connected to the internet and depositing 32 ETH to activate a validator, giving you the ability to participate directly in network consensus.
Solo staking increases the decentralization of the Ethereum network, making Ethereum more censorship-resistant and robust against attacks. Other staking methods may not help the network in the same ways. Solo staking is the best staking option for securing Ethereum.
An Ethereum node consists of both an execution layer (EL) client, as well as a consensus layer (CL) client. These clients are software that work together, along with a valid set of signing keys, to verify transactions and blocks, attest to the correct head of the chain, aggregate attestations, and propose blocks.
Solo stakers are responsible for operating the hardware needed to run these clients. It is highly recommended to use a dedicated machine for this that you operate from home–this is extremely beneficial to the health of the network.
A solo staker receives rewards directly from the protocol for keeping their validator properly functioning and online.
Why stake solo?
Solo staking comes with more responsibility but provides you with maximum control over your funds and staking setup.
Earn fresh ETH
Earn ETH-denominated rewards directly from the protocol when your validator is online, without any middlemen taking a cut.
Full control
Keep your own keys. Choose the combination of clients and hardware that allows you to minimize your risk and best contribute to the health and security of the network. Third-party staking services make these decisions for you, and they don't always make the safest choices.
Network security
Solo staking is the most impactful way to stake. By running a validator on your own hardware at home, you strengthen the robustness, decentralization, and security of the Ethereum protocol.
Considerations before staking solo
As much as we wish that solo staking was accessible and risk free to everyone, this is not reality. There are some practical and serious considerations to keep in mind before choosing to solo stake your ETH.
When operating your own node you should spend some time learning how to use the software you've chosen. This involves reading relevant documentation and being attune to communication channels of those dev teams.
The more you understand about the software you're running and how proof-of-stake works, the less risky it will be as a staker, and the easier it will be to fix any issues that may arise along the way as a node operator.
Node setup requires a reasonable comfort level when working with computers, although new tools are making this easier over time. Understanding of the command-line interface is helpful, but no longer strictly required.
It also requires very basic hardware setup, and some understanding of minimum recommended specs.
Just like how private keys secure your Ethereum address, you will need to generate keys specifically for your validator. You must understand how to keep any seed phrases or private keys safe and secure. Ethereum security and scam prevention
Hardware occasionally fails, network connections error out, and client software occasionally needs upgrading. Node maintenance is inevitable and will occasionally require your attention. You'll want to be sure you stay aware of any anticipated network upgrades, or other critical client upgrades.
Your rewards are proportional to the time your validator is online and properly attesting. Downtime incurs penalties proportional to how many other validators are offline at the same time, but does not result in slashing. Bandwidth also matters, as rewards are decreased for attestations that are not received in time. Requirements will vary, but a minimum of 10 Mb/s up and down is recommended.
Different from inactivity penalties for being offline, slashing is a much more serious penalty reserved for malicious offenses. By running a minority client with your keys loaded on only one machine at time, your risk of being slashed is minimized. That being said, all stakers must be aware of the risks of slashing. More on slashing and validator lifecycle(opens in a new tab)
Comparison with other options
Staking as a service (SaaS)
With SaaS providers you're still required to deposit 32 ETH, but don't have to run hardware. You typically maintain access to your validator keys, but also need to share your signing keys so the operator can act on behalf of your validator. This introduces a layer of trust not present when running your own hardware, and unlike solo staking at home, SaaS does not help as much with geographic distribution of nodes. If you're uncomfortable operating hardware but still looking to stake 32 ETH, using a SaaS provider may be a good option for you.
Solo staking is significantly more involved than staking with a pooling service, but offers full access to ETH rewards, and full control over the setup and security of your validator. Pooled staking has a significantly lower barrier to entry. Users can stake small amounts of ETH, are not required to generate validator keys, and have no hardware requirements beyond a standard internet connection. Liquidity tokens enable the ability to exit from staking before this is enabled at the protocol level. If you're interested in these features, pooled staking may be a good fit.
Get some hardware: You need to run a node to stake
Sync an execution layer client
Sync a consensus layer client
Generate your keys and load them into your validator client
Monitor and maintain your node
While active you will earn ETH rewards, which will be periodically deposited into your withdrawal address.
If ever desired, you can exit as a validator which eliminates the requirement to be online, and stops any further rewards. Your remaining balance will then be withdrawn to the withdrawal address that you designate during setup.
The Staking Launchpad is an open source application that will help you become a staker. It will guide you through choosing your clients, generate your keys and depositing your ETH to the staking deposit contract. A checklist is provided to make sure you've covered everything to get your validator set up safely.
Choose network
Holesky testnet
Solo validators are expected to test their setup and operational skills on the Holesky testnet before risking funds. Remember it is important to choose a minority client as it improves the security of the network and limits your risk.
If you're comfortable with it, you can set up everything needed from the command line using the Staking Launchpad alone.
To make things easier, check out some of the tools and guides below that can help you alongside the Staking Launchpad to get your clients set up with ease.
There are a growing number of tools and services to help you solo stake your ETH, but each come with different risks and benefits.
Attribute indicators are used below to signal notable strengths or weaknesses a listed staking tool may have. Use this section as a reference for how we define these attributes while you’re choosing what tools to help with your staking journey.
Open source
Audited
Bug bounty
Battle tested
Trustless
Permissionless
Multi-client
Self custody
Economical
Open source
Essential code is 100% open source and available to the public to fork and use
Open source
Closed source
Explore node and client setup tools
There are a variety of options available to help you with your setup. Use the above indicators to help guide you through the tools below.
Products and services are listed as a convenience for the Ethereum community. Inclusion of a product or service does not represent an endorsement from the ethereum.org website team, or the Ethereum Foundation.
Node tools
Please note the importance of choosing a minority client as it improves the security of the network, and limits your risk. Tools that allow you to setup minority client are denoted as "multi-client."
These are a few of the most common questions about staking that are worth knowing about.
A validator is a virtual entity that lives on Ethereum and participates in the consensus of the Ethereum protocol. Validators are represented by a balance, public key, and other properties. A validator client is the software that acts on behalf of the validator by holding and using its private key. A single validator client can hold many key pairs, controlling many validators.
Each key-pair associated with a validator requires exactly 32 ETH to be activated. More ETH deposited to a single set of keys does not increase rewards potential, as each validator is limited to an effective balance(opens in a new tab) of 32 ETH. This means that staking is done in 32 ETH increments, each with it's own set of keys and balance.
Do not deposit more than 32 ETH for a single validator. It will not increase your rewards. If a withdrawal address has been set for the validator, excess funds over 32 ETH will be automatically withdrawn to this address during the next validator sweep.
If solo staking seems too demanding for you, consider using a staking-as-a-service provider, or if you're working with less than 32 ETH, check out the staking pools.
Going offline when the network is finalizing properly will NOT result in slashing. Small inactivity penalties are incurred if your validator is not available to attest for a given epoch (each 6.4 minutes long), but this is very different to slashing. These penalties are slightly less than the reward you would have earned had the validator been available to attest, and losses can be earned back with approximately an equal amount of time back online again.
Note that penalties for inactivity are proportional to how many validators are offline at the same time. In cases where a large portion of the network is all offline at once, the penalties for each of these validators will be greater than when a single validator is unavailable.
In extreme cases if the network stops finalizing as a result of more than a third of the validators being offline, these users will suffer what is known as a quadratic inactivity leak, which is an exponential drain of ETH from offline validator accounts. This enables the network to eventually self-heal by burning the ETH of inactive validators until their balance reaches 16 ETH, at which point they will be automatically ejected from the validator pool. The remaining online validators will eventually comprise over 2/3 the network again, satisfying the supermajority needed to once again finalize the chain.
In short, this can never be fully guaranteed, but if you act in good faith, run a minority client and only keep your signing keys on one machine at a time, the risk of getting slashed is nearly zero.
There are only a few specific ways that can result in a validator getting slashed and ejected from the network. At time of writing, the slashings that have occurred have been exclusively a product of redundant hardware setups where signing keys are stored on two separate machines at once. This can inadvertently result in a double vote from your keys, which is a slashable offense.
Running a supermajority client (any client used by over 2/3 the network) also holds the risk of potential slashing in the event this client has a bug that results in a chain fork. This can result in a faulty fork that gets finalized. To correct back to the intended chain would require submitting a surround vote by trying to undo a finalized block. This is also a slashable offense and can be avoided simply by running a minority client instead.
Equivalent bugs in a minority client would never finalize and thus would never result in a surround vote, and would simply result in inactivity penalties, not slashing.
Individual clients may vary slightly in terms of performance and user interface, as each are developed by different teams using a variety of programming languages. That being said, none of them are "best." All production clients are excellent pieces of software, that all perform the same core functions to sync and interact with the blockchain.
Since all production clients provide the same basic functionality, it is actually very important that you choose a minority client, meaning any client that is NOT currently being used by a majority of validators on the network. This may sound counterintuitive, but running a majority or supermajority client puts you at an increased risk of slashing in the event of a bug in that client. Running a minority client drastically limits these risks.
Although a virtual private server (VPS) can be used as a replacement to home hardware, the physical access and location of your validator client does matter. Centralized cloud solutions such as Amazon Web Services or Digital Ocean allow the convenience of not having to obtain and operate hardware, at the expense of centralizing the network.
The more validator clients running on a single centralized cloud storage solution, the more dangerous it becomes for these users. Any event that takes these providers offline, whether by an attack, regulatory demands, or just power/internet outages, will result in every validator client that relies on this server to go offline at the same time.
Offline penalties are proportional to how many others are offline at the same time. Using a VPS greatly increases the risk that offline penalties will be more severe, and increases your risk of quadratic leaking or slashing in the event the outage is large enough. To minimize your own risk, and the risk to the network, users are strongly encouraged to obtain and operate their own hardware.
Withdrawals of any kind from the Beacon Chain require withdrawal credentials to be set.
New stakers set this at time of key generation and deposit. Existing stakers who did not already set this can upgrade their keys to support this functionality.
Once withdrawal credentials are set, reward payments (accumulated ETH over the initial 32) will be periodically distributed to the withdrawal address automatically.
To unlock and receive your entire balance back you must also complete the process of exiting your validator.