DeFi lending refers to a set of protocols that let anyone deposit digital assets into smart-contract pools and earn interest — or borrow against collateral — without a bank or broker intermediating the transaction. The largest platforms, Aave, Compound, and Morpho, collectively managed over $30 billion in deposits by mid-2026. The mechanics are simpler than the ecosystem jargon suggests.
How the supply side works
When you deposit USDC into a lending protocol, you are not handing money to a company. You are sending tokens to a smart contract — a piece of self-executing code on a public blockchain — that records your deposit and issues you a receipt token (aTokens on Aave, cTokens on Compound) that accrues interest continuously.
Every second, a fraction of the interest paid by borrowers is added to the pool. Your receipt tokens can be redeemed for your original deposit plus accumulated yield at any time, subject to available liquidity.
Interest rates are set by an algorithm, not by a committee. The key input is utilization: the share of total deposits that is currently lent out. When utilization is high, rates rise to attract more supply and discourage more borrowing; when utilization is low, rates fall. This means the rate you see today is not guaranteed tomorrow.
How the borrow side works
Borrowing in DeFi is over-collateralised: you must deposit more value than you take out. A typical example: post $1,500 in ETH to borrow $1,000 in USDC. The excess — $500 in this case — is the buffer against price moves.
Why does this work without credit checks? Because the collateral is locked in the same smart contract, and the protocol can liquidate it automatically the moment the buffer shrinks past a threshold.
Health factor is the number to watch. On Aave, a health factor above 1.0 means the position is safe; below 1.0 triggers automatic liquidation. Liquidation is not a slow process — bots scan for underwater positions and act within the same block, so a sharp price drop can trigger losses faster than a manual response.
Liquidation penalty is deducted from the collateral. On Aave v3 it runs 5–15% depending on the asset, which means borrowers can lose more collateral than their debt if they are not monitoring positions.
The three leading protocols
Aave v3
Aave is the largest decentralized lending protocol by TVL, with over $20 billion in deposits across chains as of mid-2026. It operates across Ethereum mainnet, Arbitrum, Base, Polygon, and other EVM networks.
Supply rates for stablecoins on Aave v3 run roughly 3–6% APY depending on chain and utilization. Aave's depth means it is typically the most liquid venue — large deposits have less price impact on rates.
Compound v3
Compound pioneered the liquidity-pool model in 2018. Its v3 architecture is more modular than v1/v2, with distinct markets per collateral type. TVL in mid-2026 was approximately $2.7 billion. Rates tracked slightly below Aave in this period, at roughly 3.5–5.8% APY on USDC.
Morpho Blue
Morpho operates differently. Its core is a minimal, immutable 650-line primitive that creates isolated lending markets rather than a shared pool. Curators — entities like Gauntlet or Re7 — assemble vaults on top of this primitive, selecting which collateral to accept and at what parameters.
The architecture reduces the spread between supply and borrow rates. As of mid-2026, Morpho's optimised USDC vaults paid 4–7% APY — typically 1–2 percentage points above comparable Aave rates. The trade-off is that each vault carries the risk profile of whoever curated it, not just the base protocol.
Morpho's TVL reached roughly $10–11 billion by late May 2026, making it the second-largest lending protocol by assets.
Rate comparison (mid-2026)
| Protocol | USDC supply APY | USDT supply APY | TVL (approx.) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aave v3 | 3–6% | 3–6% | ~$20B |
| Compound v3 | 3.5–5.8% | 3–5% | ~$2.7B |
| Morpho Blue | 4–7% (via vaults) | 4–7% (via vaults) | ~$10–11B |
| Spark / Sky | 4.5–6% (USDS) | — | — |
Rates are utilization-driven and shift daily. The figures above reflect the mid-2026 environment with the Federal Reserve's policy rate still above 4%. If rates fall, DeFi yields compress with them.
Why people borrow against stablecoins
The most common DeFi borrowing strategy is not to spend the borrowed funds — it is to maintain exposure to an asset while accessing liquidity. An ETH holder who expects ETH to appreciate but needs dollars for operating costs can post ETH as collateral, borrow USDC, and avoid selling.
A second use is looping or yield farming: borrow a stablecoin, deploy it elsewhere for yield, and pocket the spread. This magnifies returns but also magnifies liquidation risk if the yield source disappears.
The risks that matter
Smart-contract risk is the most acute. Hackers stole over $2.47 billion from DeFi protocols in the first half of 2025. A bug in the lending contract, an oracle that reports a wrong price, or an integration flaw between protocols can drain funds. Audits reduce but do not eliminate this risk — Morpho's core primitive is audited and immutable, but the vaults built on top are not.
Liquidation risk applies only to borrowers. A sudden market drop can push health factors below 1.0 faster than a user can act. Maintaining a conservative loan-to-value ratio — well below the protocol maximum — reduces but does not eliminate exposure.
Liquidity risk affects lenders in high-utilization scenarios. If utilization reaches 100%, new withdrawals are paused until more supply arrives or loans are repaid. Protocols typically set a "kink" in their rate curve — rates spike sharply as utilization approaches 100% — to attract new supply before the limit is hit, but in a crisis scenario withdrawals can be delayed.
Rate risk is simple: the APY you see today is not guaranteed. Rates move with borrower demand and Fed policy. A position built on a specific yield assumption can become uneconomic within days.
DeFi lending vs yield-bearing tokens
DeFi lending and yield-bearing stablecoins (USDY, USYC, BUIDL) are often discussed as alternatives, but they are structurally different:
| DeFi lending | Yield-bearing tokens | |
|---|---|---|
| Yield source | Borrower interest | T-bills / money-market funds |
| Permissionless | Yes (most protocols) | No — KYC/geography restrictions |
| Rate stability | Fluctuates with demand | Tied to Fed funds rate |
| Smart-contract exposure | Yes | Yes (token contract) |
| Underlying credit risk | Borrower collateral (over-secured) | US Treasury / repo market |
For permissionless access and higher rate ceilings in high-demand markets, DeFi lending wins. For a steadier, T-bill-rate return with less protocol complexity, yield-bearing tokens are the cleaner product — if you qualify for access.
Morpho on Tempo
Morpho went live on Tempo in May 2026. For businesses already settling payments on Tempo, the addition means earn functionality is available on the same chain without bridging. Morpho also powers the earn feature inside Deel's DLUSD wallet, where contractors receiving payroll can put idle balances to work. The integration illustrates the direction: payment rails and lending markets converging on chains purpose-built for stablecoin movement.
For a broader look at yield risks — across DeFi lending and yield-bearing tokens — see The real risks of earning yield on stablecoins.