Tally is shutting down after six years of operation, marking a turning point for the DAO governance sector as demand for decentralized governance tools declines.
— Tally (@tallyxyz) March 17, 2026
The blockchain-based platform, which provided voting and proposal infrastructure for more than 500 DAOs, said it will wind down operations following a reassessment of market conditions. The closure comes less than a year after Tally raised $8 million in a Series A round, highlighting how quickly sentiment has shifted across the sector.
Chief Executive Officer Dennison Bertram said the decision reflects a simple reality: there is currently no sustainable venture-backed business model for governance tooling in crypto. The company had initially been built around the expectation that thousands of decentralized protocols and millions of participants would require sophisticated coordination infrastructure. That vision, he said, has not materialized at scale.
Tally processed more than $1 billion in payments and supported protocol treasuries exceeding $25 billion during its lifetime. It served major ecosystems including Uniswap, Arbitrum, and ENS, offering onchain proposal systems, delegation infrastructure, and integrations with custodial services.
The shutdown underscores a broader shift in the regulatory and market environment. During the enforcement-heavy period under former SEC Chair Gary Gensler, many crypto projects adopted DAO structures as a defensive measure against potential securities classification. That dynamic created strong demand for governance tooling platforms like Tally.
That incentive weakened following the passage of the Digital Asset Clarity Act in 2025, which provided clearer definitions for tokens and reduced the perceived legal need for complex decentralized governance structures. As a result, many projects reassessed whether DAO-based coordination was necessary.
At the same time, activity within the DAO ecosystem has become increasingly concentrated. Data from 2025 shows that roughly 10 percent of DAOs accounted for about 65 percent of all governance proposals, leaving limited growth opportunities for infrastructure providers targeting a broad base of smaller organizations.
Broader market forces have also contributed to the shift. Capital and talent have increasingly moved toward artificial intelligence, where funding reached more than $200 billion in 2025 compared to under $20 billion for crypto startups. That imbalance has made it more difficult for blockchain companies to attract and retain top engineering talent.
Tally said it will begin winding down its governance application at the end of the month, with transition plans in place for larger clients. The company noted that many smaller DAOs may not be directly reachable due to its privacy-first approach, which did not require collecting user contact information.
Despite the shutdown, Dennison Bertram, CEO of Tally, said the team remains optimistic about crypto’s long-term trajectory, even as the industry shifts away from governance-heavy models that once defined its early vision.