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mev-the-hidden-tax-of-crypto
Blog

The Cost of Speed: The Arms Race for MEV-Boost Relays and Centralization

An analysis of how the competitive rush for block-building speed in Ethereum's PBS model has concentrated power in a handful of MEV-Boost relays, creating systemic risks of censorship and failure.

introduction
THE TRAP

Introduction

The infrastructure built to mitigate MEV has become its most potent centralizing force.

MEV-Boost centralizes block building. The post-Merge design outsourced block production to a competitive auction, creating a new critical dependency on permissioned relays to filter and forward blocks.

Relays are a natural oligopoly. High operational costs for low-latency, secure data pipelines create significant economies of scale, favoring a few dominant players like Flashbots, BloXroute, and Agnostic.

This is a security vulnerability. The relay cartel controls the mempool view for most validators, creating a single point of censorship and failure that contradicts Ethereum's credibly neutral ethos.

Evidence: Over 90% of post-Merge blocks use MEV-Boost, with the top three relays consistently controlling more than 80% of the relayed block market share.

market-context
THE COST OF SPEED

The State of Play: A Relay Oligopoly

The MEV-Boost relay market has consolidated into a centralized oligopoly, creating systemic risks for Ethereum's validator set.

Relay market consolidation is complete. The top three relays—BloXroute, Flashbots, and Agnostic—control over 95% of the MEV-Boost block market share. This creates a critical dependency for validators seeking maximum revenue.

The arms race for speed centralizes infrastructure. Relays compete on latency and uptime, forcing them to build proprietary, globally-distributed networks. This creates high capital and technical barriers that prevent new entrants and centralize block-building power.

Validators face a prisoner's dilemma. Choosing a smaller, decentralized relay like Titan or Ultra Sound means sacrificing significant MEV revenue. This economic pressure forces centralization, as seen in the dominance of Lido and Coinbase among top relay users.

Evidence: As of Q1 2024, the leading three relays consistently produce over 95% of MEV-Boost blocks. A single relay outage could instantly censor over 30% of Ethereum blocks.

THE COST OF SPEED

Relay Market Share & Performance Analysis

Comparative analysis of leading MEV-Boost relays, measuring market dominance, performance metrics, and centralization risks.

Metric / FeatureFlashbots RelayBloxRoute Max ProfitBloXroute EthicalUltra Sound Relay

Market Share (Last 30 Days)

28.1%

21.7%

15.3%

18.9%

Avg. Block Inclusion Latency

< 0.5 sec

< 0.3 sec

< 0.7 sec

< 0.6 sec

Censorship Resistance

Supports MEV-Share / Orderflow Auctions

Avg. Builder Payment to Validator

0.105 ETH

0.113 ETH

0.098 ETH

0.102 ETH

Geographic Centralization Risk

High (US/EU)

High (Global, single entity)

High (Global, single entity)

Medium (EU)

Requires KYC/Whitelist

Open Source Relay Client

deep-dive
THE INCENTIVE MISMATCH

The Centralization Flywheel: Speed Begets Power

The economic design of MEV-Boost creates a winner-take-all dynamic where relay performance directly dictates validator profits, accelerating centralization.

Relay performance is profit. The MEV-Boost auction's winner is the validator who receives the most valuable block from a relay. Faster, more reliable relays with superior block-building connections deliver higher returns, creating a direct financial incentive for validators to centralize around top-tier operators like BloXroute and Flashbots.

The flywheel is self-reinforcing. As validators flock to the fastest relays, those relays accumulate more block proposals. This increased flow of blocks provides more data and opportunities for their builders, further optimizing their strategies and widening the performance gap. Smaller, decentralized relays cannot compete, creating a natural monopoly on speed.

Evidence: Data from Rated.Network shows the top three MEV-Boost relays consistently command over 80% of the market share. This centralization point creates a systemic risk; a fault in a major relay like Manifold or Aestus can stall a significant portion of Ethereum block production.

risk-analysis
THE COST OF SPEED

The Systemic Risks of Relay Concentration

The MEV-Boost auction, designed to democratize block building, has instead created a new, critical centralization vector in the relay layer.

01

The Single Point of Failure

A dominant relay can become a systemic risk. Its failure or censorship could halt a significant portion of Ethereum's block production, creating a network-level outage. This is not hypothetical; a major relay outage in 2023 caused ~20% of blocks to be missed in a single slot.

  • Censorship Risk: A relay can filter transactions, undermining neutrality.
  • Liveness Risk: Technical failure cascades to validators and the chain.
~20%
Blocks Missed
>80%
Relay Market Share
02

The Economic Black Box

Relays operate as opaque intermediaries, obscuring the true flow of value. Validators are price-takers, often unaware of the optimal bid for their block space. This creates an information asymmetry where relay operators and builders capture disproportionate value.

  • Opaque Fees: Hidden builder payments and priority gas auctions.
  • Validator Sub-Optimization: Leaving ~10-20% of potential MEV revenue on the table.
10-20%
Revenue Leakage
Opaque
Fee Markets
03

The Protocol-Level Response: PBS

The endgame is Proposer-Builder Separation (PBS) enshrined in-protocol (ePBS). This moves the relay's critical functions—commitment, attestation, and slashing—into the core consensus layer, eliminating the trusted intermediary.

  • Decentralized Censorship Resistance: Censorship becomes a protocol violation.
  • Transparent Auctions: All bids are on-chain, creating a verifiable market.
  • Long-Term Horizon: ePBS is a multi-year roadmap item post-Danksharding.
L1
Enshrined
Multi-Year
Roadmap
04

The Short-Term Mitigation: Relay Diversity

While ePBS is built, the ecosystem fights centralization by promoting relay diversity. Projects like Flashbots' SUAVE aim to decentralize the builder side, while validator tools encourage multi-relay configurations to dilute any single point of control.

  • Client Diversity Parallel: Treat relay selection like client diversity.
  • SUAVE's Vision: A decentralized block-building network and mempool.
  • Validator Tools: Software to auto-optimize across multiple relays.
5+
Active Relays
SUAVE
Future Builder
counter-argument
THE PERMISSIONLESS FALLACY

The Rebuttal: "But Relays Are Permissionless!"

Permissionless entry is a necessary but insufficient condition for decentralization, as economic and technical barriers create a de facto oligopoly.

Permissionless is not decentralized. The MEV-Boost relay market is theoretically open, but the capital and operational requirements for running a competitive relay are prohibitive, creating a natural oligopoly.

Relays are not neutral infrastructure. They are strategic data gatekeepers that control the flow of block proposals and bids, creating a central point of failure and censorship risk for validators.

Economic incentives drive centralization. The race for zero-latency and exclusive order flow deals with builders like Flashbots, bloXroute, and Titan favors well-funded, centralized entities with global infrastructure.

Evidence: As of 2024, the top three relays (Flashbots, bloXroute, Agnostic) consistently process over 90% of MEV-Boost blocks, demonstrating extreme market concentration despite permissionless entry.

future-outlook
THE COST OF SPEED

Beyond the Relay: The Path to Decentralization

The MEV-Boost relay infrastructure, designed for efficiency, has created a centralized bottleneck that threatens Ethereum's core security model.

Relays are centralized choke points. MEV-Boost outsources block building to a competitive market but requires a trusted relay to validate and deliver payloads. This creates a single point of failure and censorship, contradicting Ethereum's permissionless ethos.

The arms race for speed centralizes power. Builders compete on latency to win blocks, favoring those with physical proximity to relays and validators. This creates a geographic centralization advantage for large, co-located operators like Flashbots and bloXroute.

Proof-of-custody is the critical fix. PBS proposals like EIP-7514 and EIP-7547 aim to decentralize relays by allowing validators to cryptographically verify block contents before signing. This removes the relay's trusted role.

Evidence: As of 2024, the top two MEV-Boost relays, operated by Flashbots and bloXroute, consistently control over 80% of relayed blocks, demonstrating extreme market concentration.

takeaways
THE COST OF SPEED

Key Takeaways for Validators and Architects

The MEV-Boost relay market is a high-stakes game where latency and trust trade-offs directly impact validator revenue and network health.

01

The Latency Trap: Why Fast Relays Win

Relays compete on sub-second block proposal times, creating a centralizing force. Validators chasing top-tier revenue are forced to connect to the fastest, most centralized relays, creating a positive feedback loop that marginalizes smaller, slower operators.

  • Key Metric: Top relays operate at ~100-200ms proposal times.
  • Centralization Risk: The top 3 relays consistently win >80% of blocks.
~200ms
Proposal Time
>80%
Top 3 Share
02

The Trust Dilemma: You Are the Fallback

MEV-Boost is an untrusted system. If a winning relay fails to deliver a valid block header, the validator must fall back to local block building within the 4-second slot time. This technical burden favors sophisticated, well-resourced operators.

  • Architectural Imperative: Your node must have a robust local builder or a diversified relay set.
  • Failure Consequence: Missing a proposal costs ~0.1-0.3 ETH in missed rewards and penalties.
4s
Slot Window
~0.2 ETH
Miss Cost
03

Solution: Diversify or Build

Mitigate relay risk through strategic diversification or in-house capability. This is a first-principles hedge against centralization and censorship.

  • Diversify: Spread bids across >5 relays from different jurisdictions and client teams.
  • Build: Implement local block building (e.g., Flashbots Suave, Eden) to guarantee proposal success and capture more value.
5+
Relay Minimum
100%
Uptime Guarantee
04

The Censorship Vector

Relays are the primary OFAC compliance choke point. Centralized relay dominance creates a single point of failure for network neutrality. Architects must plan for a post-MEV-Boost future with protocols like PBS (Proposer-Builder Separation) enshrined in the protocol.

  • Current State: Major relays filter >90% of OFAC-sanctioned transactions.
  • Future State: In-protocol PBS (e.g., EIP-4844 considerations) aims to decentralize this power.
>90%
Tx Filtered
1
Critical Chokepoint
05

The Builder Market is the Real Arena

Relays are just messengers. The real value extraction and competition happen at the builder layer (e.g., Flashbots, Titan, bloXroute). Validators must understand builder strategies—like time-bandit attacks or bundle merging—to select relays that attract ethical, high-performing builders.

  • Revenue Driver: Builder sophistication dictates 95%+ of your MEV revenue.
  • Strategy: Analyze relay leaderboards for builder diversity and dominance.
95%+
Revenue Factor
O(1)
Relay Role
06

The Endgame: Enshrined PBS

The current MEV-Boost model is a temporary crutch. The long-term solution is enshrined Proposer-Builder Separation (PBS) within the Ethereum protocol, which would decentralize block building and eliminate relay trust assumptions. Architects should design for this transition.

  • Protocol Solution: Removes relay intermediaries and trust.
  • Validator Impact: Shifts competitive edge to data availability and verification speed.
0
Relays Needed
L1
Trust Layer
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MEV-Boost Relay Centralization: The Hidden Cost of Speed | ChainScore Blog