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Open for submissions

Bug Bounty Program

Earn up to 250,000 USD and a place on the leaderboard by finding protocol, client and language compiler bugs affecting the Ethereum network.

Submit a bug(opens in a new tab)Read rules
See full leaderboards

Clients featured in the bounties

In Scope

Our bug bounty program spans end-to-end: from soundness of protocols (such as the blockchain consensus model, the wire and p2p protocols, proof of stake, etc.) and protocol/implementation compliance to network security and consensus integrity. Classical client security as well as security of cryptographic primitives are also part of the program. When in doubt, send an email to bounty@ethereum.org and ask us. You may also submit a disclosure/vulnerability directly to bounty@ethereum.org(opens in a new tab), in which case we ask that you encrypt the message using our PGP Key(opens in a new tab)

Specification bugs

The Ethereum Specifications detail the design rationale for the Execution Layer and Consensus Layer.

Consensus Layer Specifications(opens in a new tab)
Execution Layer Specifications(opens in a new tab)

It might be helpful to check out the following annotations:

Types of bugs

  • Safety/finality-breaking bugs
  • Denial of service (DOS) vectors
  • Inconsistencies in assumptions, like situations where honest validators can be slashed
  • Calculation or parameter inconsistencies

Specification documents

Client bugs

Clients run the Ethereum Network, and they need to follow the logic set out in the specification and be secure against potential attacks. The bugs we want to find are related to the implementation of the protocol.

Currently execution layer clients (Besu, Erigon, Geth, Nethermind and Reth) and consensus layer clients (Lighthouse, Lodestar, Nimbus, Teku and Prysm) are included in the Bug Bounty Program. More clients may be added as they complete audits and become production ready.

Types of bugs

  • Spec non-compliance issues
  • Unexpected crashes, RCE or denial of service (DOS) vulnerabilities
  • Any issues causing irreparable consensus splits from the rest of the network

Language compiler bugs

The Solidity and Vyper compilers are in scope of the bug bounty program. Please include all details necessary to reproduce the vulnerability such as: Input program that triggers the bug, Compiler version affected, Target EVM version, Framework/IDE if applicable, EVM execution environment/client if applicable and Operating system, Please include steps to reproduce the bug you have found in as much detail as possible.

Solidity and Vyper does not hold security guarantees regarding compilation of untrusted input – and we do not issue rewards for crashes of the compiler on maliciously generated data.

Deposit Contract bugs

The specifications and source code of the Beacon Chain Deposit Contract is part of the bug bounty program.

Dependency bugs

Certain dependencies are crucial for the Ethereum Network to function, and some of these have been added to the bug bounty program. Currently, the list of dependencies included in the bug bounty program are C-KZG-4844 and Go-KZG-4844.

Out of scope

Only the targets listed under in-scope are part of the Bug Bounty Program. This means that for example our infrastructure; such as webpages, dns, email etc, are not part of the bounty-scope. ERC20 contract bugs are typically not included in the bounty scope. However, we can help reach out to affected parties, such as authors or exchanges in such cases. ENS is maintained by the ENS foundation, and is not part of the bounty scope. Vulnerabilities requiring the user to have publicly exposed an API, such as JSON-RPC or the Beacon API, is out of scope of the bug bounty program.

Submit a bug

For each valid bug you find you’ll earn rewards. The quantity of rewards awarded will vary depending on Severity. The severity is calculated according to the OWASP risk rating model based on Impact on the Ethereum Network and Likelihood. View OWASP method(opens in a new tab)

The EF will also provide rewards based on:

Quality of description: Higher rewards are paid for clear, well-written submissions.

Quality of reproducibility: A Proof of Concept (POC) must be included to be eligible for rewards. Please include test code, scripts and detailed instructions. The easier it is for us to reproduce and verify the vulnerability, the higher the reward.

Quality of fix, if included: Higher rewards are paid for submissions with clear description of how to fix the issue.

Up to 2,000 USD

Low

Up to 2,000 USD

Up to 1,000 points

Severity

  • Low impact, medium likelihood
  • Medium impact, low likelihood

Example

Attacker can sometimes put a node in a state that causes it to drop one out of every one hundred attestations made by a validator
Submit low risk bug(opens in a new tab)
Up to 10,000 USD

Medium

Up to 10,000 USD

Up to 5,000 points

Severity

  • High impact, low likelihood
  • Medium impact, medium likelihood
  • Low impact, high likelihood

Example

Attacker can successfully conduct eclipse attacks on nodes with peer-ids with 4 leading zero bytes
Submit medium risk bug(opens in a new tab)
Up to 50,000 USD

High

Up to 50,000 USD

Up to 10,000 points

Severity

  • High impact, medium likelihood
  • Medium impact, high likelihood

Example

Attacker can successfully partition large parts of the network, and it is trivial for an attacker to trigger the vulnerability
Submit high risk bug(opens in a new tab)
Up to 250,000 USD

Critical

Up to 250,000 USD

Up to 25,000 points

Severity

  • High impact, high likelihood

Example

Attacker can successfully conduct remote code execution in a majority client, and it is trivial for an attacker to trigger the vulnerability
Submit critical risk bug(opens in a new tab)

Bug hunting rules

The bug bounty program is an experimental and discretionary rewards program for our active Ethereum community to encourage and reward those who are helping to improve the platform. It is not a competition. You should know that we can cancel the program at any time, and awards are at the sole discretion of Ethereum Foundation bug bounty panel. In addition, we are not able to issue awards to individuals who are on sanctions lists or who are in countries on sanctions lists (e.g. North Korea, Iran, etc). Local laws require us to ask for proof of your identity. You are responsible for all taxes. All awards are subject to applicable law. Finally, your testing must not violate any law or compromise any data that is not yours and must take place on local running testnets.

  • Issues without a POC or that have already been submitted by another user or are already known to spec and client maintainers are not eligible for bounty rewards.
  • Public disclosure of a vulnerability or reporting it to other parties without prior agreement makes it ineligible for a bounty.
  • Employees and contractors of the Ethereum Foundation or client teams in scope of the bounty program may participate in the program only in the accrual of points and will not receive monetary rewards.
  • Ethereum bounty program considers a number of variables in determining rewards. Determinations of eligibility, score and all terms related to an award are at the sole and final discretion of the Ethereum Foundation bug bounty panel.

Execution Layer Bug Bounty leaderboard

Find execution layer bugs to get added to this leaderboard

Consensus Layer Bug Bounty leaderboard

Find consensus layer bugs to get added to this leaderboard

Frequently asked questions

Questions?

Email us: bounty@ethereum.org(opens in a new tab)

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