Stablecoin yield is the return you earn for putting dollar stablecoins to work — and it always has a source. Understanding where that yield comes from is the single best way to judge whether it is sustainable or a warning sign. Legitimate yield is paid by borrowers, traders, or interest on reserves.
The main sources of stablecoin yield
- Lending demand: borrowers pay interest to borrow stablecoins; lenders earn it. Rates rise when demand to borrow dollars is high.
- Tokenized Treasuries: products that hold short-term US government debt pass the underlying interest through to holders. This yield tracks prevailing short-term rates.
- Liquidity provision: supplying stablecoins to trading pools earns a share of fees, plus any protocol incentives.
- Derivatives strategies: some “synthetic dollar” products such as USDe generate yield from funding rates on hedged positions.
How to judge a stablecoin yield
Compare the advertised rate to short-term interest rates. A yield modestly above the risk-free rate usually reflects real lending or trading demand. A yield dramatically higher should prompt the question: who is paying this, and what risk am I taking? Unusually high, “guaranteed” returns have historically been a hallmark of unsustainable or fraudulent schemes.
Yield is not free — the risks
Earning yield means taking on smart-contract risk, counterparty risk, and depeg risk. A higher yield generally signals higher risk, not a free lunch. Incentive-driven yields (paid in a protocol’s own token) can also evaporate when incentives end.
Fixed vs. variable
Most on-chain stablecoin yields are variable and reset continuously with market conditions. Some structured products offer a fixed term, but a fixed rate does not remove the underlying credit and platform risks.
Frequently asked questions
Are stablecoin yields safe?
They carry real risks — smart-contract, counterparty and depeg. “Stable” refers to the price target, not to a guaranteed return.
What is a normal stablecoin yield?
Sustainable yields tend to sit somewhere around prevailing short-term interest rates, plus a premium for the risk taken.
Why are some yields so high?
Very high yields usually reflect higher risk, temporary token incentives, or — in the worst cases — an unsustainable model.
This article is educational information and is not financial advice.
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Disclaimer: The content on this page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Always do your own research before making investment decisions.
Elena Petrova is a regulatory correspondent specializing in crypto law and policy with over 10 years of financial journalism experience. Formerly a finance reporter at Reuters, Elena covers SEC enforcement, MiCA implementation, and global stablecoin regulations. She holds a J.D. from Georgetown Law and is a member of the New York State Bar. Her regulatory analysis is frequently referenced by compliance officers and legal teams at major exchanges.
Conflicts of interest
I have no current legal practice or retainer relationships with any cryptocurrency company. Past employment relationships are listed publicly.