Ethereum opened July 2026 trading near $1,571, a fraction of the roughly $4,950 all-time high it set less than a year earlier.
That drop has a lot of people typing the same question into Google in slightly different ways, whether it's "Ethereum price prediction" or "ETH price prediction" or something more specific to this exact month.
This article walks through where ETH actually stands right now, what the named analysts and institutions covering it are projecting for the rest of 2026, and why the gap between today's price and nearly every one of those targets might be the single most useful number in the whole story.
Key Takeaways
Ethereum trades near $1,571 as of July 1, 2026, according to CoinMarketCap, a fraction of the roughly $4,950 all-time high it reached in August 2025.
Wall Street's 2026 year-end targets span a wide range, from Citi's conservative $3,175 to Standard Chartered's $7,500.
Fundstrat's own research desk, led by Sean Farrell, sets a more cautious $4,500 year-end target than the public commentary of its co-founder Tom Lee.
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin confirmed on June 23, 2026 that the Foundation is cutting its budget by roughly 40% and its workforce by 54 positions.
SharpLink, Inc. confirmed a 10,000 ETH purchase in late June 2026 even as spot Ethereum ETFs continued recording net outflows.
Every named 2026 price target in this article currently sits above Ethereum's spot price, which is a meaningful signal in its own right.
That's down substantially from the roughly $4,950 all-time high ETH reached in August 2025, and it comes after a stretch that CoinMarketCap itself has flagged as pushing both Bitcoin and Ethereum to new 2026 lows alongside a broader sell-off across big tech and AI-related stocks. The technical backdrop matches that mood.
Ethereum has spent recent weeks trading below the levels CoinMarketCap flagged in its own 2026-low headline, a sign that near-term momentum has stayed weak.
None of that confirms a bottom is in, and it doesn't rule one out either.
Oversold conditions like this have historically set up sharp bounces at points in Ethereum's history, but they've also preceded further drawdowns whenever broader risk sentiment stayed negative for longer.
What actually matters for a July 2026 Ethereum price prediction has less to do with the exact number on the chart today and more to do with the direction of the forces pushing on it, which is exactly what the next section breaks down.
Before getting into specific price targets, it helps to understand the tug of war currently happening underneath Ethereum's chart.
Three forces are pulling in different directions at once, and each one matters for anyone trying to make sense of where ETH goes from here.
Spot Ethereum ETFs recorded roughly $30 million in net outflows on June 29, 2026 alone, according to data reported by Cointelegraph, part of a broader negative flow pattern through most of the month.
That's the bearish side of the ledger.
On the other side, corporate treasury buyers kept adding ETH through that same stretch.
That's a genuinely unusual dynamic to watch. Regulated ETF investors have been net sellers of Ethereum in recent weeks while some of the most Ethereum-focused corporate balance sheets in the market kept buying into the weakness.
A lot of the optimistic case for Ethereum in the back half of 2026 rests on Glamsterdam, the network's next major protocol upgrade.
Glamsterdam is built around two headline changes, enshrined proposer builder separation and block level access lists, both designed to let the network process far more transactions in parallel and eventually support a much higher gas limit.
That distinction matters for anyone factoring a Glamsterdam catalyst into their Ethereum price prediction for the second half of 2026, because "expected" and "confirmed" behave very differently once a market has already started pricing something in.
There's a structural shift happening alongside the price action that doesn't get enough attention.
Whether that trade is bullish for ETH or simply a sign of a maturing, less centrally managed network is genuinely debatable, but it's a real structural change worth tracking alongside the price itself.
This is the section most readers came here for, so let's get straight into the numbers.
With ETH trading near $1,571 and sitting below its major moving averages, the near-term Ethereum price prediction is really about stabilization rather than a single breakout number.
A move that reclaims the moving averages Ethereum has been trading beneath would be the first real technical signal that selling pressure is fading, while a continued slide toward fresh 2026 lows would confirm the bearish structure CoinMarketCap has already flagged this year.
For a market this oversold, the more useful question isn't "what's the target" but something simpler. Is the ETF selling pressure starting to run out before price finds a floor, or is it keeping pace with the corporate buying happening on the other side of the trade.
This is where the specific numbers people are actually searching for come in, and it's worth sitting with how wide the range really is.
That gap between Lee's public commentary and Fundstrat's internal target is worth remembering, and it's exactly what the MEXC Analysis section below digs into.
Here's what stands out across every one of these targets. Even the most conservative one, Citi's $3,175, sits roughly double Ethereum's current price of $1,571.54.
Beyond the 2026 year-end numbers, Tom Lee has also floated a much bigger, much longer-dated vision for Ethereum.
It's worth being precise about what that number actually represents. Lee did not attach a specific year to the $250,000 figure, describing it as a longer-cycle outcome rather than a 2026 or even 2027 target, so it shouldn't be confused with the year-end numbers above.
It's also the kind of forecast that invites scrutiny given how far it sits from where ETH trades today, and reasonable people can and do disagree about how realistic it is.
Here's the part of this story that doesn't get said often enough.
When one firm's own co-founder is publicly bullish at $7,000 to $9,000 while that same firm's research desk tells paying clients to expect $4,500, that's not just an interesting footnote. It's a signal about how to actually read price predictions in this market.
Public price targets from any single voice, however credible, tend to carry a promotional undertone, especially when that person or firm holds a large position in the asset they're forecasting. Tom Lee's BitMine is one of the largest corporate holders of ETH in the world, which doesn't make his view wrong, but it does mean it deserves the same scrutiny anyone would apply to a forecast from someone with real skin in the game.
What's more useful for an actual trader is looking at the full spread rather than any single headline. Citi's $3,175, Fundstrat's own $4,500, and Standard Chartered's $7,500 collectively describe a realistic band for where informed institutional opinion sits, and every point in that band is meaningfully above Ethereum's current price near $1,571.
That gap matters more than any individual number. It means that under nearly every published scenario, from the most conservative bank on Wall Street to the most bullish corporate insider, the expectation is for Ethereum to be worth more a year from now than it is today. The size of that move is genuinely uncertain. The direction, according to every named forecaster covered in this piece, is not.
What is the Ethereum price prediction for July 2026?
Most near-term forecasts center on stabilization rather than a specific breakout number, with ETH's direction likely depending on whether ETF outflows keep outweighing corporate treasury buying.
Will Ethereum go up in 2026?
Every named 2026 year-end target from Citi, Fundstrat, Standard Chartered, and Tom Lee currently sits above Ethereum's spot price, though none of these forecasts are guaranteed outcomes.
How high can ETH realistically go?
Wall Street's year-end 2026 range runs from Citi's $3,175 to Standard Chartered's $7,500, while more bullish voices like Tom Lee have floated $7,000 to $9,000 for 2026 and a longer-dated vision as high as $250,000.
When might Ethereum reach $5,000 again?
Reaching that level again would require ETH to roughly triple from its current price near $1,571, a move that falls within Standard Chartered's and Tom Lee's published 2026 ranges but above Citi's and Fundstrat's more conservative targets.
Ethereum's story in July 2026 comes down to a genuine tension. The price on the screen says the market is worried, while nearly every named Wall Street and corporate forecast says the opposite.
Both things can be true at once, and figuring out which one wins out over the second half of the year is exactly why this is worth watching closely rather than guessing at.
If you want to follow ETH's price as this plays out, MEXC's Ethereum price page tracks it in real time alongside the rest of the market.