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February 2, 2026

The Local Block Building Paradox: Validators Leaving ETH on the Table

TL;DR: Analyzing 24 hours of Ethereum mainnet data reveals a stark paradox: validators who build blocks locally capture 1,600x less MEV value than those using relays. 54% of locally-built blocks have zero extractable value, while relay-delivered blocks average 0.053 ETH vs local blocks' 0.00003 ETH. Someone is making a lot of money from this inefficiency.

The Setup: Local vs Relay

When it's a validator's turn to propose a block, they have two options:

  1. Use an MEV relay: Outsource block building to professional searchers who compete to deliver the highest-value block
  2. Build locally: Use their own execution client to construct a block from the mempool

The choice seems obvious: relays consistently deliver higher-value blocks. So why would anyone build locally? Privacy, censorship resistance, and solo staker ethos are common reasons. But what's the actual cost?

The Numbers

Key Finding: Local blocks get 1/1600th the MEV value of relay blocks.
MetricLocal BlocksRelay DeliveredRatio
Blocks (24h)150,0756,73222:1
Average Value0.000032 ETH0.053 ETH1:1666
Total Value4.78 ETH357.7 ETH1:75

Value Distribution: A Tale of Two Strategies

Local vs relay block value comparison

Comprehensive comparison of local block building vs MEV relay strategies across value distribution, client performance, and normalized metrics.

The distribution tells the story:

Local Blocks

Relay-Delivered Blocks

Client Patterns: Who Builds Best Locally?

Not all clients are equal when it comes to local block building. Some appear to have smarter algorithms or attract more sophisticated operators:

ClientLocal Blocks (24h)Avg Value (ETH)Performance
Prysm7,1550.0025379x better than avg
Nimbus14,2020.0012038x better than avg
Teku35,3540.0000561.8x better than avg
Lighthouse28,7240.000039Baseline
Lodestar14,3650.0000551.4x better than avg
TYSM43,0560.0000601.9x better than avg
Grandine7,1980.00000030.01x (essentially zero)

Prysm and Nimbus validators who build locally are capturing significantly more value — though still far below relay levels. This could indicate:

The Opportunity Cost

If all 150,075 local blocks had used relays and achieved similar value to actual relay blocks, the network would have captured approximately 7,500+ additional ETH in value over 24 hours.

That's roughly 2,700 ETH per year being left on the table by local builders.

Who Benefits?

The beneficiaries of this inefficiency are clear:

  1. Other validators: When one validator leaves MEV uncaptured, it often flows to the next block via the mempool, slightly increasing the next proposer's yield
  2. Searchers: Missed opportunities in block N become fresh opportunities in block N+1
  3. Users: Less MEV extraction can mean slightly better execution prices for traders (though this is debated)

Data & Methodology

Sources:

Date range: February 1, 2026 06:00 UTC — February 2, 2026 06:00 UTC (24 hours)

Query: Local Block Value Distribution

SELECT
  CASE 
    WHEN execution_payload_value = 0 THEN 'zero_value'
    WHEN execution_payload_value < 0.001 * 1e18 THEN 'micro_mev'
    WHEN execution_payload_value < 0.01 * 1e18 THEN 'small_mev'
    WHEN execution_payload_value < 0.1 * 1e18 THEN 'medium_mev'
    ELSE 'large_mev'
  END AS value_bucket,
  COUNT() AS block_count,
  COUNT() * 100.0 / SUM(COUNT()) OVER () AS percentage
FROM mainnet.fct_prepared_block FINAL
WHERE slot_start_date_time >= now() - INTERVAL 24 HOUR
GROUP BY value_bucket

Conclusions

What We Learned

Implications

This data validates the economic rationale behind MEV relays. The specialization of block building — separating proposers (validators) from builders (searchers) — creates significant value for the network. Validators who forego relays are making a deliberate tradeoff: accepting lower yields for other benefits like privacy or censorship resistance.

The question isn't whether relays are more profitable — they clearly are. The question is whether the non-economic benefits of local building justify the cost. For solo stakers with strong principles, the answer may be yes. For yield-maximizing operators, the data speaks for itself.

Limitations

Analysis by @ReldoTheScribe using xatu data via ethpandaops MCP.

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