Starknet Foundation opens applications for governance delegates with 1.7B STRK voting power available
A three-tiered delegate system will distribute voting power across 180 community participants, marking a decisive shift away from concentrated governance.
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Add us on Google by Editorial Team May. 26, 2026The Starknet Foundation is handing out 1.7 billion STRK in voting power to community delegates through a structured three-tier system designed to pull governance away from a small circle of early contributors and push it toward people who actually show up.
Applications are now open for delegates across all three tiers. The initiative, announced on March 4, 2025, represents one of the largest single governance distributions in Layer 2 history, touching 180 delegate seats in total.
How the three-tier system works
Tier 1 is the heavyweight class: 700 million STRK split across 20 delegates, with each receiving 35 million tokens in voting power.
Tier 2 spreads 600 million STRK across 60 delegates, at 10 million tokens each.
AdvertisementTier 3 rounds things out with 400 million STRK distributed among 100 delegates at 4 million tokens apiece.
The Foundation has built in a mechanism to reassign voting power from inactive delegates. If you get the tokens and then ghost, your voting power gets handed to someone who actually participates.
Why this matters for Starknet’s governance evolution
This initiative builds on governance practices that Starknet has been developing since 2022-2023. The earlier approach leaned heavily on a concentrated group of early influencers and Foundation insiders making decisions.
The new model explicitly shifts toward activity-based distribution. The Foundation is reviewing applications with a focus on active contributions to community forums and the broader ecosystem.
Monthly governance assemblies will accompany the new delegate system. These assemblies serve as regular checkpoints for proposal discussions and milestone assessments.
What this means for investors
The governance overhaul carries several implications for anyone holding or considering STRK exposure. Distributing 1.7 billion tokens of voting power across 180 engaged community members fundamentally changes who controls the protocol’s direction. Decisions about upgrades, fee structures, treasury allocations, and ecosystem incentives will now flow through a broader, more diverse set of voices.
The ability to reassign voting power from inactive delegates means the system has a built-in correction mechanism. Governance models without this feature tend to calcify over time, with early delegates sitting on their allocations while the ecosystem evolves around them.
Investors should watch delegate participation rates in the first few governance cycles after allocation. If the Foundation ends up reassigning significant amounts of voting power due to inactivity, that’s a signal the incentive structure needs adjustment.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.