Ethereum to Close Its Largest Testnet, Holesky, After Fusaka Upgrade

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Fusaka is set to make Ethereum rollups cheaper and faster by spreading out the “data storage work” more evenly across validators.

By Shaurya Malwa|Edited by Parikshit Mishra

Updated Sep 2, 2025, 4:28 a.m. Published Sep 2, 2025, 4:12 a.m.

closed sign (CoinDesk Archives)
  • Ethereum is shutting down the Holesky testnet after two years, following the Fusaka upgrade later this year.
  • Holesky, once the largest public testnet, faced issues like inactivity leaks, prompting the launch of the new Hoodi testnet.
  • Hoodi aims to address Holesky’s problems, while Sepolia and Ephemery continue to serve specific testing roles.

A fresh slate of Ethereum testnets is replacing Holesky, the once-massive staging ground now set for shutdown after two years of service.

The wind-down will occur two weeks after the Fusaka upgrade is finalized later this year, at which point client and infrastructure teams will cease providing support.

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Fusaka is set to make Ethereum rollups cheaper and faster by spreading out the “data storage work” more evenly across validators.

Holesky went live in 2023 to stress-test Ethereum’s proof-of-stake machinery at scale. It quickly became the largest public testnet, providing thousands of validators with a platform to trial upgrades before they were deployed on the mainnet.

Major milestones, such as the Dencun and Pectra upgrades — which lowered transaction costs and upgraded validator efficiency, among other features — were run through Holesky first.

However, cracks began to appear as the network aged. Holesky encountered “inactivity leaks” after Pectra’s activation in early 2025, a term referring to validators going offline in large numbers, which created a significant backlog for those attempting to exit.

The result was months-long queues that made it impractical to test the full validator lifecycle. For developers needing fast feedback loops, Holesky had become more of a roadblock than a tool.

That’s why Ethereum launched Hoodi in March 2025, a clean-slate testnet built to sidestep Holesky’s problems while carrying forward its role as the go-to environment for validator and staking provider testing.

Alongside Hoodi, Sepolia continues to serve as the main testnet for dapps (decentralized apps) and smart contracts, while Ephemery offers quick-reset validator cycles every 28 days.

Ether (ETH) was trading at $4,380 in Asian morning hours Tuesday, nearly flat over the past 24 hours.

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