2
Layer 1
EthereumETH
The world's leading programmable blockchain and smart contract platform
Price (May 2026)~$2,340
Market Cap~$280 Billion
LaunchedJuly 2015
← Back to all reviews

Quick Summary

Beginner suitabilityLow — technical complexity is high; exposure better via ETF or exchange
Risk levelMedium — established but facing real competition and value-capture uncertainty
Best forDeFi, smart contracts, ecosystem exposure, long-term Layer 1 holding
Main risksLayer 2 value capture dilution, competition from Solana, Vitalik sales, regulatory risk
EnterCrypto viewEducational review only — not a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold
Last reviewed4 May 2026
🔍
Reviewed by EnterCrypto Research

EnterCrypto is an Ireland-based crypto education website focused on explaining blockchain, Bitcoin, wallets, exchanges, and crypto projects in plain English for beginners. Our reviews are educational only and do not provide financial advice.

Last reviewed: 4 May 2026  •  Next review due: November 2026

👥 Team and Origin

Ethereum was proposed in 2013 by Vitalik Buterin and launched in 2015 with co-founders including Gavin Wood and Joseph Lubin. Buterin remains the most prominent figure in Ethereum development. Buterin attracted controversy in early 2026 after selling significant ETH holdings which contributed to a sharp price decline. The Ethereum Foundation oversees core development.


⚙️ Technology and Use Case

Ethereum is the world's dominant smart contract platform — infrastructure for DeFi, NFTs, stablecoins, DAOs, and thousands of applications. It transitioned to proof-of-stake in September 2022, reducing energy use by over 99%. It now supports 100+ Layer 2 networks including Arbitrum and Base providing 100,000+ TPS combined. ETH peaked at approximately $4,946 in August 2025 and trades around $2,340 today.


📊 Tokenomics and Market Cap

Ethereum has no hard supply cap, but EIP-1559 burns a portion of fees with each transaction, making ETH deflationary during periods of high activity. Circulating supply is approximately 120.7 million ETH. Spot Ethereum ETFs approved in May 2024 continue attracting institutional inflows. At around $280 billion, ETH is significantly below its peak valuation.


🏆 Competition and Market Position

Despite years of Ethereum killers, Ethereum has maintained dominance in DeFi TVL, developer activity with 60%+ market share, and institutional adoption. Its massive developer community and Layer 2 ecosystem make it extremely difficult to displace.


🚩 Red Flags and Risks

Primary risk is value capture uncertainty — if most activity migrates to Layer 2 networks paying small gas fees to mainnet, ETH deflationary mechanism matters less. Vitalik ETH sales in early 2026 caused significant market concern. Competition from Solana is real and growing.


🔗 Ethereum vs Solana

Ethereum is the incumbent with deep DeFi infrastructure, institutional ETF adoption, and the largest developer base. Solana offers faster, cheaper transactions with a growing ecosystem. Ethereum's Layer 2 networks compete directly with Solana's single-chain performance. Both can coexist — they serve overlapping but distinct user bases. Ethereum is generally considered the safer, more established choice; Solana offers higher risk/reward.


📉 ETH Value Capture

The key open question for ETH investors is whether the token captures sufficient value from its ecosystem. Most activity now happens on Layer 2 networks which pay small fees to mainnet. If L2 fees are too low, ETH may not burn enough to remain deflationary. This is the central debate in the Ethereum investor community in 2026.


🟢 Bull case

Layer 2 ecosystem activity drives significant ETH fee burns, staking yield attracts institutional capital, ETF inflows accelerate, or a major regulatory clarity event unlocks new demand. ETH at $2,340 is approximately 53% below its 2025 ATH — recovery to prior levels is the base bull scenario.

🔴 Bear case

Value capture fails as L2s commoditise mainnet fees, Solana ecosystem overtakes Ethereum in developer activity, Vitalik continues large-scale ETH sales, or institutional interest migrates primarily to Bitcoin ETFs rather than ETH.

🔄 What would change our view?

We would become more positive if: ETH burn rate increases materially as L2 activity grows, staking yields attract institutional capital, or Pectra upgrade delivers meaningful scalability improvements. We would become more cautious if: Vitalik sells accelerate, Layer 2 growth visibly cannibalises mainnet revenue, or Solana overtakes Ethereum in DeFi TVL.

How we scored Ethereum

How scores work →
Team / Origin
9/10 — Strong public team, clear vision
Technology
9/10 — Leading programmable blockchain
Tokenomics
7/10 — No hard cap but fee burn helps
Competition
8/10 — Dominant but facing challengers
Red Flags
7/10 — Value capture uncertainty
Speculative Upside
7/10 — More upside than BTC from current levels

Overall verdict

Ethereum remains the foundational layer of the decentralised internet. Its current price, well below its 2025 all-time high, offers a potentially interesting entry point for long-term investors. One of the stronger speculative upside profiles among established assets, though value capture uncertainty and Layer 2 dynamics introduce real risks that should be understood before investing.

8.3/10Overall
7/10Upside/Risk

Sources checked for this review

Disclaimer: This review is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Scores are subjective assessments based on publicly available information at the time of writing (4 May 2026). Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk of total loss. Always do your own research and consult a qualified financial adviser before investing. Read our scoring methodology.