The leading decentralized lending protocol powering billions in DeFi
25 min read
Last reviewed: February 2026
Intermediate
What is Aave?
Aave is a decentralized, non-custodial liquidity protocol where users can participate as suppliers or borrowers. Suppliers provide liquidity to earn interest, while borrowers can take out overcollateralized loans in a permissionless manner.
Think of Aave as a decentralized bank—but one where the interest rates are set algorithmically based on supply and demand, and where anyone can participate without approval, KYC, or credit checks.
Key Statistics
Total Value Locked (TVL)
$15+ billion across all deployments
Supported Chains
Ethereum, Polygon, Arbitrum, Optimism, Avalanche, Base, and more
Assets Supported
100+ tokens across deployments
Protocol Version
Aave V3 (current), V2 (legacy)
Brief History
Aave began as ETHLend in 2017, a peer-to-peer lending platform. It rebranded to Aave (Finnish for "ghost") in 2018 and pivoted to a pool-based model. Key milestones:
2020 — Aave V1 launch with the pool-based model that became DeFi standard
2021 — Aave V2 with improved gas efficiency and credit delegation
2022 — Aave V3 with efficiency mode, isolation mode, and cross-chain portals
2023-2024 — GHO stablecoin launch, expansion to new chains
Why Aave Matters
Aave is the largest lending protocol by TVL and has become critical infrastructure for DeFi. Many yield strategies, leveraged positions, and composable protocols are built on top of Aave's liquidity pools.
How Lending Works
Aave operates through liquidity pools—smart contracts that aggregate deposits and make them available for borrowing. Here's how each role works:
Supplying (Lending)
Deposit assets — Connect your wallet and supply tokens to Aave
Receive aTokens — Get 1:1 aTokens representing your deposit (e.g., deposit USDC, receive aUSDC)
Earn interest — aTokens automatically accrue interest; your balance grows over time
Withdraw anytime — Redeem aTokens for underlying assets (subject to liquidity)
The key innovation is that aTokens are yield-bearing—you don't need to claim interest; it's automatically reflected in your aToken balance.
Borrowing
Supply collateral — First deposit assets that can be used as collateral
Borrow against it — Take out a loan up to your borrowing capacity
Pay interest — Accrue debt over time at the borrow rate
Repay loan — Return borrowed assets plus interest to free collateral
Liquidation Risk
If your collateral value drops relative to your debt (measured by Health Factor), your position can be liquidated. Liquidators repay part of your debt in exchange for your collateral at a discount. Always monitor your Health Factor!
Health Factor Explained
Your Health Factor measures position safety:
Health Factor > 1 — Position is safe
Health Factor = 1 — Liquidation threshold reached
Health Factor < 1 — Position is liquidatable
A higher Health Factor means more safety buffer. Most users maintain HF of 1.5-2.0 or higher to provide cushion against price volatility.
Interest Rate Mechanics
Aave uses an algorithmic interest rate model that adjusts rates based on pool utilization—the ratio of borrowed assets to total supplied assets.
The Utilization Curve
Interest rates follow a kinked curve with two slopes:
Below optimal utilization — Rates increase gradually as utilization rises
Above optimal utilization — Rates spike sharply to incentivize deposits and repayments
This design ensures that pools remain liquid (not fully borrowed) while providing competitive rates during normal conditions.
Variable vs. Stable Rates
Rate Type
Behavior
Best For
Variable
Changes continuously based on utilization
Short-term positions, flexible strategies
Stable
Fixed at borrow time (can be rebalanced by protocol)
Longer-term positions, predictability
Note: Stable rates aren't truly fixed—they can be "rebalanced" if market conditions change significantly. Variable rates are more common and typically lower.
Supply APY vs. Borrow APY
Supply APY is always lower than borrow APY because:
Not all supplied assets are borrowed (utilization < 100%)
Protocol takes a "reserve factor" (typically 10-20%) of interest paid
This reserve builds up a safety fund and rewards AAVE stakers
Rate Shopping
Interest rates vary across chains and even across Aave deployments on the same chain. Check rates on multiple networks before depositing or borrowing large amounts.
Risk Parameters
Each asset on Aave has specific risk parameters that determine how it can be used. Understanding these is crucial for managing positions effectively.
Key Parameters
Loan-to-Value (LTV)
Maximum borrowing power as % of collateral. E.g., 80% LTV means you can borrow $80 for every $100 collateral.
Liquidation Threshold
Collateralization level at which liquidation occurs. Always higher than LTV to provide buffer.
Liquidation Bonus
Discount liquidators receive when repaying debt. E.g., 5% means they get $105 collateral for repaying $100 debt.
Reserve Factor
Portion of interest that goes to protocol reserves. Typically 10-20%.
Example: ETH Parameters (typical)
LTV
80%
Liquidation Threshold
82.5%
Liquidation Bonus
5%
Can be Collateral
Yes
Can be Borrowed
Yes
V3 Risk Features
Aave V3 introduced several advanced risk management features:
Isolation Mode — Limits exposure to new/risky assets
Siloed Borrowing — Restricts certain assets to isolated borrowing only
Supply/Borrow Caps — Limits total protocol exposure to each asset
AAVE Tokenomics
AAVE is the governance and utility token of the Aave protocol, with a fixed supply and multiple functions.
Token Utility
Function
Description
Governance
Vote on protocol changes, risk parameters, treasury allocation
Safety Module
Stake AAVE to backstop protocol shortfalls; earn rewards
Fee Discounts
Reduced fees for AAVE stakers (varies by implementation)
Treasury
Protocol revenue accrues to DAO treasury, controlled by AAVE holders
Supply & Distribution
Total Supply: 16 million AAVE (fixed, no inflation)
Circulating Supply: ~15 million AAVE
Treasury Holdings: Significant reserves for development and incentives
Safety Module
The Safety Module is a key mechanism where users can stake AAVE (or AAVE/ETH LP tokens) to earn rewards while providing insurance against protocol shortfall events:
Stakers earn AAVE rewards from protocol emissions
In a shortfall event, up to 30% of staked AAVE can be slashed to cover bad debt
Cooldown period of 20 days applies when unstaking
APY varies based on total staked and protocol-set reward rates
Staking Risk
Safety Module staking carries real risk. While no slashing has occurred to date, stakers are the first line of defense if the protocol incurs bad debt. Understand this tradeoff before staking.
GHO Stablecoin
GHO is Aave's native, decentralized stablecoin that borrowers can mint against their collateral:
Overcollateralized — Backed by Aave deposits
Interest to DAO — GHO borrow interest goes to Aave treasury
Facilitators — Multiple approved entities can mint GHO under caps
How to Use Aave
Getting started with Aave is straightforward. Here's a step-by-step guide:
Supplying Assets
Go to app.aave.com and connect your wallet
Select your network (Ethereum, Polygon, etc.)
Click "Supply" on the asset you want to deposit
Enter amount and confirm the transaction
Receive aTokens representing your deposit
Borrowing Assets
First, supply collateral (steps above)
Enable as collateral if not automatically enabled
Click "Borrow" on the asset you want to borrow
Choose rate type (variable or stable)
Enter amount within your borrowing capacity
Confirm transaction
Repaying & Withdrawing
To repay: Click "Repay" on your borrowed asset, enter amount, confirm
To withdraw: Click "Withdraw" on your supplied asset (ensure Health Factor stays > 1)
Pro Tip
Use Aave's built-in "Repay with collateral" or "Swap & Repay" features to manage positions more efficiently, especially in emergencies where your Health Factor is low.
Common Strategies
Yield farming — Supply stablecoins or ETH to earn passive yield
Leveraged long — Supply ETH, borrow stablecoins, buy more ETH
Looping — Repeatedly supply and borrow to amplify yield (advanced, risky)
Capital efficiency — Borrow against idle assets instead of selling
Advanced Features
PRO
Aave offers several advanced features for sophisticated users and developers.
Flash Loans
Borrow any amount without collateral, as long as you repay within the same transaction. Enables arbitrage, collateral swaps, and self-liquidation. Requires smart contract development to use effectively.
Credit Delegation
Depositors can delegate their borrowing power to trusted addresses, enabling uncollateralized lending to known counterparties. Useful for institutional arrangements and inter-company lending.
Efficiency Mode (E-Mode)
When borrowing correlated assets (e.g., stablecoins against stablecoins, or stETH against ETH), E-Mode allows higher LTV and liquidation thresholds because the collateral and debt move together.
Portals
Cross-chain functionality allowing assets to be moved between Aave deployments on different networks. Enables unified liquidity and position management across chains.
Unlock advanced features guide
Pro members get detailed tutorials on flash loans, credit delegation, and advanced strategies.
Despite extensive audits, Aave contracts could contain undiscovered vulnerabilities. The protocol has a bug bounty program and safety module, but total loss is possible in an exploit scenario.
Liquidation Risk
Borrowers face liquidation if collateral values drop. During volatile markets, liquidations can cascade. Maintaining conservative Health Factors and having emergency funds helps mitigate this risk.
Oracle Risk
Aave relies on Chainlink price feeds. Oracle failures or manipulation could cause incorrect liquidations or enable exploits. The protocol has circuit breakers, but oracle dependency is a fundamental risk.
Governance Risk
AAVE holders can vote to change parameters, add risky assets, or make other decisions that could negatively impact the protocol. Large token holders have outsized influence.
Liquidity Risk
If utilization hits 100%, suppliers cannot withdraw until borrowers repay. Interest rates spike in this scenario, but temporary illiquidity is possible during market stress.
Understand the full risk picture
Complete risk assessment covering technical, economic, and operational factors.
Aave is the gold standard for DeFi lending—battle-tested, widely integrated, and continuously improving. It's essential infrastructure that enables much of the DeFi ecosystem to function.
The Permissionless Risk-Free Rate
In traditional finance, government bond yields serve as the "risk-free rate" — the baseline return against which all other investments are measured. In permissionless DeFi, Aave v3 USDC supply yield on Ethereum mainnet serves a similar function. It represents the lowest-risk yield available to any wallet holder without KYC, built on the most audited lending contracts, with the deepest liquidity and longest track record. When evaluating any DeFi yield, a useful question is: how much more am I earning than Aave USDC — and what additional risks am I taking to get it? For a deeper framework, see Understanding DeFi Yield and Risk.
What Aave does well:
Most established and trusted lending protocol in DeFi
Multi-chain presence with consistent experience
Continuous innovation (V3, GHO, E-Mode)
Strong governance and decentralization
Robust risk management and safety mechanisms
What to consider:
Interest rates can be volatile during market stress
Liquidation risk is real for borrowers
Smart contract risk exists despite audits
AAVE token value depends on protocol growth and fee generation
Who should use Aave:
Anyone seeking yield on idle crypto assets
Traders needing liquidity without selling holdings
Disclaimer: This is educational content about protocol mechanics, not investment advice. DeFi protocols carry risks including smart contract vulnerabilities, liquidation risk, and market volatility. Always do your own research.
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