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What is stablecoin interest? How to earn yield on your stablecoins

By Kraken Learn team
8 min
22 May 2026
Key takeaways
  1. Stablecoin interest is the return you earn by lending or depositing stablecoins into protocols or platforms that put them to work (usually through overcollateralized lending).

  2. Yields can offer APYs significantly higher than traditional savings accounts.

  3. You can earn through CeFi platforms (simpler, custodial) or DeFi protocols (higher potential yields, more risk).

  4. The main risks are smart contract exploits, platform insolvency, and stablecoin depegging, all of which have happened to major players.

  5. Not ready to dive into DeFi yourself? Kraken's Stablecoin Rewards and DeFi Earn let you earn yield without leaving the exchange.


What is stablecoin interest?

You've converted some crypto to stablecoins. Maybe you're sitting on the sidelines waiting for a better entry. Or maybe you've taken profits and aren't ready to cash out to fiat just yet.

Either way, the result is the same: those stablecoins are sitting idle, doing nothing.

Stablecoin interest changes that. It's the yield you earn by depositing your stablecoins somewhere they can be used, usually, lent out to borrowers who pay for the privilege. The mechanics mirror traditional finance:

  1. You provide capital
  2. Someone else borrows it
  3. You collect a cut of the interest they pay

The difference? There's no bank taking most of the margin. And stablecoin interest rates often beat what traditional savings accounts can offer.

Return is typically expressed as APY (annual percentage yield), which accounts for compounding. A 5% APY on $10,000 in USDC means roughly $500 in earnings over a year, assuming rates stay constant (which is unlikely).

At the time of writing, current yields on major stablecoins like USDC and USDT typically fall in the 3–8% range, depending on where and how you deposit. The tricky part is understanding why those rates exist, and what risks come with them.

How does stablecoin interest work?

Stablecoin interest is generated by borrowers willing to pay for access to capital. In decentralized finance (DeFi), this happens through lending protocols like Aave or Compound. You deposit stablecoins into a smart contract. Borrowers post collateral (e.g., ETH or other crypto worth more than what they're borrowing) and pay interest to access your funds. That interest flows back to you, minus whatever cut the protocol takes.

In centralized finance (CeFi), the mechanics are similar but the counterparty is different. You deposit stablecoins with an exchange or lending platform. They might then lend those funds to institutions, traders, or other borrowers. You earn interest while they keep the spread.

The critical difference is that in DeFi, smart contracts enforce the rules automatically. In CeFi, you're trusting a company to manage your funds responsibly. Neither of these is totally risk-free, of course, both major players and protocols have failed in the past.

How stablecoin yield works
Discover how to earn yield on your stablecoins.

Where do stablecoin yields come from?

Yields come from real economic activity, and it's important to understand their source before depositing into a particular platform or protocol.

Borrower demand

The main driver is the users looking to borrow funds. They may want to borrow stablecoins to leverage positions, arbitrage price differences between platforms, or access capital to avoid selling their crypto assets.

When borrowing demand spikes, interest rates rise, thereby incentivizing more deposits. Conversely, when it decreases, so too do interest rates, in turn making borrowing cheaper. For instance, Aave's USDC supply rate dropped from 4.5% in late 2025 to around 2% by early 2026 as speculative activity declined.

Protocol incentives

Some platforms subsidize yields with their own tokens to attract liquidity. This can inflate APYs dramatically (but can result in those tokens losing value over time). If you're earning 15% but half of it comes from a governance token that drops 80%, you've lost money.

Reserve income sharing

Certain stablecoins share income earned on their backing assets. Circle, for instance, earns hundreds of millions quarterly from Treasury bills backing USDC, and shares a portion with distribution partners. This is how some platforms offer "free" yield on USDC balances.

Liquidity provision

Beyond lending, you can earn by providing stablecoins to liquidity pools on decentralized exchanges (DEXs). Traders swap against your liquidity, and you collect a cut of every trade. The yields can be higher, but so are the complexities — including impermanent loss if you're pairing stablecoins with volatile assets.

Five ways to earn interest on stablecoins

1. CeFi lending platforms

The simplest option involves depositing stablecoins with a centralized, reputable platform, earning interest, and withdrawing when you want. Rates typically range from 3–7% APY. Platforms like Kraken handle the complexity for you.

2. DeFi lending protocols

Protocols like Aave, Compound, and Morpho let you lend directly, with smart contracts handling collateral and liquidations. Current yields run 2–5% on Ethereum mainnet, sometimes higher on Layer 2 networks where liquidity is thinner.

You maintain custody of your assets (in a sense: they're locked in the protocol's smart contract). You also bear smart contract risk: if the code has a bug or gets exploited, your funds can vanish, as has happened before.

3. Yield-bearing stablecoins

A newer category: stablecoins that automatically accrue yield. sUSDS (from Sky, formerly MakerDAO) earns around 4.5% APY funded by protocol revenue. sUSDe (from Ethena) uses delta-neutral strategies to generate returns. You hold the token while the yield accumulates in its value.

The advantage is simplicity, requiring only that you hold the asset. The risk is that these are more complex instruments than plain USDC, with additional layers that can break.

4. Exchange-integrated DeFi

This is something of a middle ground between DeFi and CeFi.

Platforms like Kraken offer DeFi Earn, which routes your deposits to audited DeFi protocols (Aave, Morpho) while handling the technical complexity. You get DeFi-like yields (up to 8% APY at the time of this writing) without managing wallets, gas fees, or smart contract interactions directly.

You're still exposed to smart contract risk, but the platform handles the operational overhead. For many users, this is the sweet spot.

5. Liquidity provision

The more adventurous of yield chasers deposit stablecoins into DEX liquidity pools on Curve, Uniswap, or similar platforms. You earn trading fees and often additional token rewards.

Stablecoin-only pools (like USDC/USDT) minimize impermanent loss since both assets track the same value. Yields can reach 5–10%+ when incentives are active, but require active management and carry smart contract risk.

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Stablecoin interest risks you should know

Smart contract risk

Every DeFi protocol runs on code. If that code has a vulnerability (or if someone finds a way to exploit it) funds can be drained or permanently frozen. At the time of this writing, over $77 billion has been lost to DeFi hacks, scams, and exploits since the sector emerged. Audits reduce risk, but can't eliminate it altogether. Learn more about how to stay safe in DeFi.

Counterparty risk

In CeFi, you trust a company instead of code. In the case of Celsius, this had catastrophic effects when the platform froze withdrawals and filed for bankruptcy, affecting over half a million users. The courts later ruled that customer deposits belonged to the company's bankruptcy estate, and not the customers.

Depeg risk

Stablecoins can lose their peg. USDC dropped to $0.87 during the Silicon Valley Bank crisis in March 2023. UST collapsed entirely in 2022, wiping out $40+ billion. Even brief depegs can trigger liquidations and losses for yield farmers.

Rate volatility

Yields aren't fixed. They fluctuate with borrowing demand, protocol incentives, and broader market conditions. The 8% you're earning today might be 3% next month.

Is stablecoin interest worth it?

That depends on what you're comparing it to — and how much complexity you're willing to manage.

Against a savings account paying 0.5%, even a conservative 4% stablecoin yield looks compelling. You earn roughly 8x as much while maintaining exposure to dollar-equivalent assets. For crypto-native users who hold stablecoins anyway, putting them to work is almost a no-brainer.

Against other crypto opportunities, new considerations arise. In a bull market, that 5% yield might pale against a token that doubles. However, in a bear market or prolonged periods of sideways chop, stable yield starts looking a lot more attractive.

Stablecoin interest isn't free money. It's better thought of as compensation for providing capital and taking on risk (smart contract risk, counterparty risk, regulatory risk). The yields exist because those risks are real. Understand them, size your positions accordingly, and never deposit more than you can afford to lose.

Start earning on your stablecoins today

Ready to put your stablecoins to work?

Kraken offers multiple paths depending on your comfort level. Stablecoin Rewards earns automatically on your USDC and USDG balances — no action required. DeFi Earn routes your funds to audited protocols for higher yields with a simplified interface. And for those who want full control, Kraken Wallet connects you directly to DeFi.

Start small, understand what you're earning and why, and never deposit more than you're comfortable losing.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Earning interest on stablecoins is not risk-free. The main risks are smart contract exploits in DeFi protocols, platform insolvency in CeFi (as seen with Celsius, where courts ruled deposits belonged to the bankruptcy estate, not customers), and stablecoin depegging (USDC briefly fell to $0.87 during the Silicon Valley Bank crisis in March 2023). Using audited, well-established platforms, diversifying across protocols, and only depositing what you can afford to lose all materially reduce risk — but never eliminate it.

Stablecoin interest rates typically range from 3% to 8% APY in 2026, depending on where you deposit. Centralized platforms like Kraken's Stablecoin Rewards offer steady rates with no lockups. DeFi protocols like Aave and Compound offer variable rates driven by borrower demand, sometimes higher on Layer 2 networks. Yields above 10% generally signal additional risk, such as unaudited protocols, token-subsidized rewards, or unsustainable lending strategies.

Yes. In most jurisdictions, stablecoin interest is taxable as ordinary income at the fair market value of the rewards when you receive them. In the US, the IRS treats crypto-denominated interest the same as other digital asset income (Revenue Ruling 2023-14), and you report it on Schedule 1 of Form 1040. Selling or swapping the stablecoins later may also trigger a small capital gain or loss based on price movement. Tax rules differ by country, so always consult a local tax professional.

These materials are for general information purposes only and are not investment advice or a recommendation or solicitation to buy, sell, stake or hold any cryptoasset or to engage in any specific trading strategy. Kraken does not and will not work to increase or decrease the price of any particular cryptoasset it makes available. Some crypto products and markets are regulated and others are unregulated; regardless, Kraken may or may not be required to be registered or otherwise authorized to provide specific products and services in each market, and you may not be protected by government compensation and/or regulatory protection schemes. The unpredictable nature of the cryptoasset markets can lead to loss of funds. Tax may be payable on any return and/or on any increase in the value of your cryptoassets and you should seek independent advice on your taxation position. Geographic restrictions may apply. See Legal Disclosures for each jurisdiction here.

Geographic restrictions apply. Rewards rates are determined and paid out by Kraken in its sole discretion and are subject to change. See our Terms of Service for more info. Due to its partnership with the issuer, Kraken receives an economic benefit with respect to amounts of stablecoin minted, held on platform, and received in on-chain transfers.

Rewards are variable and not guaranteed; you can lose some or all of your assets. Interacting with on-chain smart contracts involves risks which are further detailed in the terms of service, including technological risk (bugs, exploits, and oracle/MEV/bridge failures), market risk (price volatility, de-pegs, and liquidation where relevant), and operational risk (irreversible transactions, gas fees, network congestion). Kraken does not control third-party protocols. Offered by Payward Wallet, LLC. Fees apply. Availability varies by jurisdiction.