Curve DAO Token (CRV)

CRV is the governance and liquidity incentive token of Curve Finance, the largest AMM optimized for stablecoin and pegged-asset swaps. By locking CRV for up to 4 years, holders receive veCRV (vote-escrowed CRV) — non-transferable governance weight that controls which Curve liquidity pools receive CRV emissions. This mechanism created the “Curve Wars,” where protocols compete to accumulate veCRV to direct liquidity toward their stablecoins.


Stat Value
Ticker CRV
Price $0.22
Market Cap $336.83M
24h Change +2.9%
Circulating Supply 1.50B CRV
Max Supply 3.03B CRV
All-Time High $15.37
Contract (Ethereum) 0xd533...cd52
Contract (Fantom) 0x1e4f...c68b
Contract (Base) 0x8ee7...0415
Contract (Energi) 0xd331...e69e
Contract (Sora) 0x002e...cad0
Contract (Etherlink) 0x004a...2f13
Contract (Polygon Pos) 0x1723...10af
Contract (Arbitrum One) 0x11cd...4978
Contract (Optimistic Ethereum) 0x0994...fb53

via ChangeNow · T&CsPrice data from CoinGecko as of 2026-04-15. Not financial advice.

How It Works

Curve Finance distributes CRV tokens continuously to liquidity providers across its pools. The emission rate each pool receives is determined by gauge weights — and gauge weights are set by veCRV holders voting weekly.

The veCRV lock system:

Lock Duration veCRV Received Voting Power Boost
1 week 0.019 veCRV per CRV Minimal 1.0×
1 year 0.25 veCRV per CRV Low 1.5×
4 years 1.0 veCRV per CRV Maximum 2.5×

veCRV holders also earn 50% of all trading fees generated on Curve (distributed as 3CRV, Curve’s native stablecoin LP token). This creates real yield for long-term lockers.

CRV emission schedule:

  • 62% of supply goes to liquidity providers over ~320 years (decaying schedule)
  • 30% to shareholders (team/investors) vested over 2–4 years
  • 3% to employees (2-year vesting)
  • 5% to community reserve

Tokenomics

CRV launched in August 2020 with an initial supply of ~1.3 billion tokens distributed retroactively to early Curve LPs. Total max supply is capped at approximately 3.03 billion CRV.

The emission model uses a decaying inflation schedule: each year, annual emissions are ≈41.6% of the previous year’s total, ensuring the bulk of supply is distributed early while maintaining long-term incentives. As of 2024, roughly 60% of max supply has been emitted.

crvUSD (2023): Curve launched its own stablecoin, crvUSD, using a novel “LLAMMA” (lending-liquidating AMM algorithm) liquidation model. crvUSD collects interest fees that accrue to veCRV holders, significantly boosting real yield.

Use Cases

  • Directing Curve liquidity — veCRV votes determine which pools are most attractive to LPs, giving protocols leverage to bootstrap stablecoin liquidity
  • Fee revenue — 50% of Curve trading fees flow to veCRV holders
  • Speculation on DeFi dominance — CRV price reflects Curve’s share of stablecoin DEX volume
  • Bribe markets — Platforms like Votium pay veCRV holders to vote for specific gauges; CRV effectively monetizes voting power

History

  • Aug 2020 — CRV launches; initial supply controversially deployed by an anonymous community member before the team’s scheduled launch
  • 2021 — Curve V2 launches, extending the AMM to non-pegged assets (ETH/BTC); Convex Finance launches, aggregating veCRV to become the largest single veCRV holder (50%+ at peak)
  • 2022 — “Curve Wars” peaks; Frax, Abracadabra, MIM, and dozens of protocols spend millions acquiring CRV/veCRV
  • Jun 2023 — Developer Michael Egorov’s personal CRV loans (~$100M against CRV collateral) trigger a cascade liquidation scare after a reentrancy exploit in older Curve pools; Egorov manually settles positions
  • 2023 — crvUSD launches on Ethereum mainnet; Curve V2 sees significant adoption
  • 2024 — Curve V3 development; CRV market cap stabilizes as real yield (crvUSD interest + trading fees) justifies long-term locking

Common Misconceptions

“veCRV can be traded.” veCRV is non-transferable and decays linearly over the lock period. Lockers can’t exit early — this is intentional to align long-term incentives.

“Convex controls Curve.” Convex holds the largest veCRV balance, but its voting is directed by CVX/vlCVX holders, creating a secondary governance layer rather than centralized control.

See Also