TLDR:Over a third of all staked POL is controlled by exchanges, with Upbit, Coinbase, and Binance leading.Polygon’s protocol cannot distinguish exchange wallets from personal wallets, limiting on-chain fixes.A yield gap between custodial and non-custodial staking could push power users toward self-staking.Liquid staking tokens like stPOL and MaticX may redirect staking rewards back through the protocol.POL staking concentration has become a pressing issue for the Polygon network. Over a third of all staked POL currently sits with centralized exchanges. Upbit holds 400 million, Coinbase controls 340 million, and Binance manages 255 million. Most retail users simply tap “stake” inside an app. They never choose a validator, compare commission rates, or move their funds. The exchange decides everything on their behalf.Exchange Dominance Creates a Structural Gap in POL StakingCrypto analyst Just Hopmans raised the concern on social media, pointing out that the protocol only sees wallet addresses. It cannot distinguish between an exchange wallet and a personal hardware wallet. Any rule created at the protocol level can be worked around with capital or structural adjustments.Over a third of all staked $POL sits with exchanges. Upbit (400M), Coinbase (340M), Binance (255M).Most of them tap “stake” in an app. They don’t choose a validator. They don’t compare commission. They don’t move. The exchange decides everything.Why this is hard to solve at…— Just Hopmans (@HopmansJust) March 28, 2026Hopmans outlined several tools that Polygon does have available. A yield gap strategy could encourage users to migrate. If non-custodial staking consistently pays more, power users would eventually move their funds. The wider the gap, the faster that migration happens.Liquid staking options like stPOL and MaticX offer another path forward. If exchanges offer liquid staking tokens rather than running their own validators, staking rewards flow back through the protocol. The exchange then earns from trading activity rather than from staking extraction.Transparency also plays a role in shifting user behavior. Publishing how much each validator passes through to delegators creates public accountability. When exchange commissions become visible to ordinary users, internal pressure builds over time.Minimum Self-Stake Rules and User Education Offer Limited ReliefA minimum self-stake ratio requirement could raise the cost of running a validator on delegated capital alone. Upbit, for example, self-stakes just one POL against a 400 million POL delegation. A ratio requirement would make that practice more expensive, though it would not eliminate it.Education and clearer user interfaces could also narrow the gap. Showing users a direct comparison — such as earning 2% on an exchange versus 5.8% through non-custodial staking — may prompt some to act. However, behavior changes slowly even when the information is clear.Hopmans was direct about what does not work. Discriminating validators by identity breaks decentralization. Eliminating commission punishes validators who are actively chosen by informed users. Banning exchanges outright is not enforceable on-chain.The honest conclusion from the analysis is that Polygon can reduce this problem but cannot fully solve it. No upgrade, formula, or smart contract can force a user to move POL off an exchange. This remains the biggest structural challenge for POL tokenomics, and one that the Polygon team has yet to publicly address in detail.The post POL Staking Concentration: Why Exchanges Control Over a Third of All Staked POL appeared first on Blockonomi.