The Ethereum Foundation is putting fresh money behind a familiar problem in crypto. Security may be a best practice, but for many teams, it is still too expensive to implement.
On Tuesday, the foundation announced a new Ethereum Security Subsidy Program, a joint initiative designed to lower the cost of smart contract audits for developers building in the ecosystem.
The program will provide $1 million in subsidies and is being launched in partnership with Areta, a digital asset advisory firm whose audit marketplace connects projects with a pool of more than 20 professional security firms.
The logic behind the program is fairly simple. Audits are widely treated as essential, especially for teams handling on-chain funds, governance systems, or infrastructure that others may build on top of.
But they remain costly, and that cost has often created an awkward gap between what developers know they should do and what early-stage budgets can realistically support.
The Ethereum Foundation acknowledged that directly in its announcement, describing audits as a best practice that too often remains out of reach.
This subsidy does not remove the need for projects to take responsibility for their own code, of course. It does, however, make professional review more accessible, and that matters in an ecosystem where unaudited or poorly reviewed contracts still account for a significant share of preventable risk.
By working through Areta, the foundation is not building its own in-house audit selection mechanism from scratch. Instead, it is plugging developers into an existing marketplace model, one that gives teams access to a broader range of firms rather than funneling them toward only a handful of names.
That could prove useful for smaller builders who often struggle not only with price but also with finding the right auditor for their stage, codebase, and timeline.
For Ethereum, the initiative says something larger too. The network’s long-term strength is not only about scaling or adoption. It also depends on whether builders can ship code with fewer avoidable vulnerabilities, and whether security becomes easier to reach before something breaks.
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