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June 12, 2026
Regulation · · 2 mins read · 394 words

Stablecoin Yields Explained: Where the Interest Comes From

Stablecoin yields can come from lending, liquidity, or tokenized Treasuries. Here is how to tell sustainable yield from a red flag.

Elena Petrova
Written by
Elena Petrova J.D. Verified
Regulation Correspondent
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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.

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
About the author
Verified
Elena Petrova
Regulation Correspondent · 10+ years experience

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.

Education
J.D. Georgetown Law, B.A. International Relations, LSE
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Conflicts of interest

I have no current legal practice or retainer relationships with any cryptocurrency company. Past employment relationships are listed publicly.

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