How to Stake Ethereum (ETH) on Lace
Lace may not directly support ETH staking, but you can still use Lace to buy ETH and transfer it for staking.
Current APY
2.4%
Price
$2,209.4
Platform Fee
No
Platform Type
wallet
Step-by-Step: Stake ETH on Lace
Install Lace
Download and install Lace from its official site. Set up a new wallet or import an existing seed phrase, and back up your recovery phrase securely.
Fund the wallet with ETH
Buy ETH on an exchange (Coinbase, Kraken, Binance) and withdraw to your Lace address. Double-check the network before sending.
Open the staking section
In Lace, navigate to the staking or earn tab for Ethereum. Pick a validator — look for low commission, long uptime, and avoid the top validator to support decentralization.
Delegate and confirm
Enter the amount of ETH to stake and confirm the transaction. Rewards typically begin accruing in 1–2 epochs and compound automatically or are claimable from the same screen.
Lace for ETH Staking: Pros & Cons
Pros
- + Cleanest UI of any Cardano wallet — built for mainstream users
- + Backed by IOG and Cardano Foundation
- + Multi-account, NFT support, dApp connector built in
- + Receives priority for new Cardano features
Cons
- - Newer than Daedalus / Yoroi — fewer years of public auditing
- - Browser extension only (mobile beta as of 2025)
- - ADA-only
Other Platforms for ETH Staking
Exchange · 25–35% commission on rewards
Exchange · 10–15% commission on rewards
Liquid Staking · 10% of staking rewards (split: 5% node operators, 5% DAO treasury)
Liquid Staking · ~14% commission to node operators
Exchange · Fees built into displayed APY
Exchange · 10–20% commission
Exchange · Built into rates
Liquid Staking · 10% of staking rewards
Liquid Staking · 2% of staking rewards
validator · Varies (institutional pricing)
validator · 5–10% commission
validator · 5–10% commission
wallet · No platform fee — only network/validator commission
wallet · Provider fee (Lido 10%, Stader 10% on rewards)