What is DeFi?
DeFi stands for decentralised finance. It refers to financial services — lending, borrowing, trading, earning interest — that run on public blockchains instead of being controlled by banks, brokerages, or other intermediaries.
In traditional finance (TradFi), a bank sits between you and your money. It holds your deposits, approves your loans, and clears your trades. You trust the bank. DeFi replaces that trust with code.
Smart contracts — self-executing programs on a blockchain — enforce the rules automatically. When you deposit crypto into a lending protocol, the smart contract handles interest calculations, collateral checks, and liquidations without any human involvement. The code is public, auditable, and runs 24/7.
The result: anyone with a crypto wallet and an internet connection can access financial services that previously required a bank account, a credit check, or citizenship in the right country.
How DeFi Works
Smart Contracts
Smart contracts are the foundation of every DeFi protocol. They are programs deployed to a blockchain (most commonly Ethereum) that execute automatically when conditions are met.
A simple example: a lending smart contract says “if a user deposits ETH as collateral worth at least 150% of the loan value, release USDC to their wallet.” No loan officer. No approval process. The math runs on-chain.
Smart contracts are immutable once deployed (unless the protocol includes upgrade mechanisms), transparent (anyone can read the code), and trustless (you don’t need to trust the team — you trust the code).
Liquidity Pools
Traditional exchanges use an order book — buyers and sellers post offers, and trades match when prices align. DeFi uses a different model: liquidity pools.
A liquidity pool is a smart contract holding two tokens (e.g., ETH and USDC). Users called liquidity providers (LPs) deposit equal values of both tokens into the pool. When a trader wants to swap ETH for USDC, they trade against the pool, not against another person.
The price adjusts automatically using a mathematical formula (typically x × y = k, the constant product formula). LPs earn a share of trading fees in return for providing liquidity.
Governance Tokens
Most DeFi protocols issue governance tokens. Holders vote on protocol changes — fee structures, new features, treasury spending. This gives communities control over the protocol rather than a central company.
Examples: UNI (Uniswap), AAVE (Aave), MKR (MakerDAO), CRV (Curve).
Key DeFi Protocols
Uniswap
Uniswap is the largest decentralised exchange (DEX) by volume. It pioneered the automated market maker (AMM) model and runs on Ethereum and multiple L2 networks. Uniswap v3 introduced concentrated liquidity, allowing LPs to set price ranges for more capital-efficient positions.
Aave
Aave is a lending and borrowing protocol. Users deposit crypto to earn interest (supply APY) or borrow against their deposits as collateral. Aave introduced variable and stable borrow rates, flash loans (uncollateralised loans repaid in a single transaction), and the GHO stablecoin.
Compound
Compound was one of the first lending protocols and popularised the concept of algorithmic interest rates that adjust based on supply and demand. It introduced cTokens — interest-bearing tokens that represent your deposit and accrue value over time.
MakerDAO
MakerDAO created DAI, one of the most widely used decentralised stablecoins. Users lock crypto (ETH, WBTC, and other assets) in Maker Vaults as collateral and mint DAI against it. The system maintains DAI’s $1 peg through collateralisation ratios and stability fees. MakerDAO has rebranded to Sky Protocol but the core mechanics remain.
Curve Finance
Curve specialises in stablecoin and pegged-asset trading. Its AMM formula is optimised for assets that should trade close to 1:1, resulting in minimal slippage for large stablecoin swaps. Curve’s CRV token and “Curve Wars” — protocols competing for CRV voting power to direct liquidity incentives — became a defining feature of DeFi 2.0.
DeFi vs CeFi: Key Differences
| Feature | DeFi | CeFi |
|---|---|---|
| Custody | You hold your own keys | Exchange holds your funds |
| KYC/AML | Usually not required | Required |
| Access | Anyone with a wallet | Must pass onboarding |
| Transparency | All transactions on-chain | Internal, opaque |
| Counterparty risk | Smart contract risk | Platform insolvency risk |
| Speed | Near-instant (network dependent) | Varies; business hours |
| Support | Community forums, documentation | Customer service |
| Regulation | Minimal (evolving) | Regulated by jurisdiction |
| Examples | Uniswap, Aave, Curve | Coinbase, Binance, Kraken |
The FTX collapse in 2022 demonstrated the counterparty risk of CeFi: when the exchange fails, users can lose everything. In DeFi, you always hold your keys — though smart contract exploits create a different category of risk.
Total Value Locked (TVL) Explained
TVL — total value locked — is the primary metric used to measure DeFi’s scale. It represents the total value of crypto assets deposited into DeFi protocols at any given time.
A protocol with $5B TVL has $5 billion worth of crypto sitting in its smart contracts — used as collateral for loans, in liquidity pools for trading, or staked for yield.
TVL fluctuates with:
- Crypto prices (rising prices inflate TVL even without new deposits)
- User inflows and outflows
- New protocols launching or dying
Track TVL across all protocols at DeFiLlama. In 2026, total DeFi TVL regularly exceeds $100 billion.
Important caveat: TVL can be manipulated. Protocols can inflate TVL by offering high incentives to attract short-term capital. TVL alone does not indicate a protocol’s quality or safety.
How to Get Started with DeFi
What You Need
Step-by-Step: Your First DeFi Interaction
- Install MetaMask or Rabby as a browser extension
- Create a new wallet and back up your seed phrase (12 or 24 words) — store it offline, never digitally
- Buy ETH on a centralised exchange (Coinbase, Kraken, etc.)
- Withdraw ETH to your wallet address
- Visit a protocol like Uniswap or Aave directly (always verify the URL)
- Connect your wallet when prompted
- Approve the transaction and pay the gas fee
Best DeFi Wallets
MetaMask
MetaMask is the most widely used DeFi wallet, available as a browser extension and mobile app. It connects to virtually every DeFi protocol and supports all EVM-compatible chains (Ethereum, Arbitrum, Polygon, BNB Chain, etc.).
Pros: Universal compatibility, large community, well-documented
Cons: Has had phishing vulnerabilities historically; UI can be confusing for new users
Rabby
Rabby, built by DeBank, has become the preferred wallet for experienced DeFi users. It shows you a pre-transaction simulation — you see exactly what your wallet will send and receive before confirming. It also flags risky contracts automatically.
Pros: Transaction previews, better security warnings, clean UI
Cons: Less name recognition; mobile app is newer
Hardware Wallets for DeFi
For significant holdings, combine a hardware wallet (Ledger, Trezor) with MetaMask or Rabby. The hardware wallet holds your private keys; the browser extension handles the DeFi interface. You sign every transaction on the hardware device.
DeFi on Different Chains
DeFi started on Ethereum but has expanded across multiple chains. Each has trade-offs.
Ethereum
The original DeFi chain. Highest security, deepest liquidity, most protocols. Gas fees can be expensive during congestion, though Layer 2 networks have largely solved this.
Arbitrum
Ethereum Layer 2 using optimistic rollup technology. Near-Ethereum security with gas fees typically under $0.10. Most major Ethereum DeFi protocols (Aave, Uniswap, Curve) have deployed on Arbitrum. Currently the largest L2 by TVL.
Base
Coinbase’s L2 chain built on the OP Stack. Fast growth in 2024-2025, strong developer activity, and tight Coinbase integration for easy onboarding.
BNB Chain (BSC)
Binance’s blockchain. Lower gas fees than Ethereum mainnet, large ecosystem centred on PancakeSwap. More centralised than Ethereum — BNB Chain uses a small set of validators approved by Binance. Higher historical rate of rug pulls and exploits.
Solana
Not EVM-compatible but hosts a growing DeFi ecosystem (Jupiter for DEX aggregation, Marinade for liquid staking, Kamino for lending). Extremely low fees and fast finality. Has suffered network outages historically.
Polygon
EVM-compatible sidechain with very low fees. Widely used for gaming and NFT DeFi applications. Aave and Curve are both active on Polygon.
Key DeFi Risks
Smart Contract Bugs
DeFi code can contain vulnerabilities. A single bug can allow an attacker to drain an entire protocol. Notable exploits:
Mitigation: Use protocols that have been audited by multiple reputable firms and have operated without incident for years. Check Immunefi for bug bounty programs — larger bounties indicate the team takes security seriously.
Rug Pulls
A rug pull occurs when the team behind a protocol abandons it and steals user funds. Common in new, unaudited projects. Red flags include anonymous teams with no track record, unaudited code, liquidity not locked, and suspiciously high APYs.
Impermanent Loss
Liquidity providers face impermanent loss: when the ratio of the two tokens in a pool changes significantly, LPs end up with less value than if they had just held the tokens. In extreme price movements, impermanent loss can exceed trading fee income.
Liquidation Risk
In lending protocols, if your collateral value falls below the required ratio, your position gets liquidated automatically. You lose a portion of your collateral (the liquidation penalty) and the protocol closes your loan.
Always maintain a healthy buffer above the liquidation threshold. Aave calls this the “health factor” — keep it above 1.5 to be safe.
Oracle Manipulation
DeFi protocols rely on price oracles to determine asset values. If an attacker manipulates a price oracle (especially through flash loans), they can trigger artificial liquidations or drain protocol reserves. Reputable protocols use Chainlink or multiple oracle sources for this reason.
DeFi Glossary
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| AMM | Automated Market Maker — uses a mathematical formula rather than an order book to price trades |
| APY | Annual Percentage Yield — includes compound interest; what you actually earn |
| APR | Annual Percentage Rate — simple interest; does not include compounding |
| Collateral | Crypto locked as security against a loan |
| Flash loan | Uncollateralised loan that must be borrowed and repaid within a single transaction |
| Gas | Fee paid to blockchain validators to process transactions |
| Health factor | Aave’s metric for loan safety; below 1.0 triggers liquidation |
| Impermanent loss | Loss experienced by LPs when token price ratios in a pool diverge |
| LP token | Token representing your share of a liquidity pool |
| Liquidity pool | Smart contract holding two tokens used to facilitate trading |
| Oracle | External data feed that provides price information to smart contracts |
| Rug pull | Scam where developers abandon a project and steal funds |
| Seed phrase | 12 or 24 words that control access to your wallet |
| Slippage | Difference between expected and actual trade price due to low liquidity |
| Smart contract | Self-executing code on a blockchain that enforces agreement terms |
| TVL | Total Value Locked — total assets deposited in a protocol |
| Yield farming | Strategy of moving assets between protocols to maximise returns |
Frequently Asked Questions
Is DeFi safe?
DeFi carries real risks — smart contract exploits, rug pulls, liquidation, and user error are all possible. That said, established protocols with years of track record (Uniswap, Aave, Curve) have proven relatively safe. The risk is highest with new, unaudited protocols offering very high APYs. Never invest more than you can afford to lose.
Do I need to complete KYC to use DeFi?
Most DeFi protocols require no KYC — you connect a wallet and interact directly with the smart contract. Some front-ends are geo-blocked in certain countries, but you can usually access protocols directly through the smart contract or alternative front-ends. Be aware of your local tax and regulatory obligations.
What is the minimum amount needed to use DeFi?
Technically, any amount works. Practically, Ethereum mainnet gas fees can make small transactions uneconomical. For amounts under $500, consider using Layer 2 networks (Arbitrum, Base) or BNB Chain where fees are cents rather than dollars.
Can I lose all my money in DeFi?
Yes. If you use an unaudited protocol that gets exploited, or if your collateral is liquidated, or if you fall for a phishing attack, you can lose everything. Risk management — using audited protocols, never investing more than you can lose, and keeping collateral ratios healthy — is essential.
What is the difference between DeFi and crypto?
Crypto refers broadly to cryptocurrencies and blockchain networks. DeFi is a specific application of crypto technology: financial services built on smart contracts. Bitcoin is crypto but not DeFi. Uniswap is both crypto and DeFi.
How is DeFi taxed?
In most jurisdictions, DeFi transactions are taxable. Swapping tokens, earning yield, receiving liquidity mining rewards, and even providing liquidity may all trigger taxable events. Tax laws vary significantly by country. Use a crypto tax tool (Koinly, CoinTracker) and consult a tax professional familiar with crypto in your jurisdiction.
What happened to DeFi in the 2022 bear market?
The 2022 market crash exposed over-leveraged positions across DeFi. The collapse of Terra/LUNA wiped out tens of billions in supposedly stable value. Protocols with excessive token-incentive mechanics collapsed. The survivors — Uniswap, Aave, Curve, MakerDAO — emerged with cleaner token economics and stronger community governance.
Related guides:
How to Use Aave: Lending and Borrowing Guide
How to Use PancakeSwap: Complete Beginner’s Guide
DeFi Risks Explained: What Can Go Wrong and How to Stay Safe
What is Yield Farming? Complete Guide
