Staking APY

Staking APY (Annual Percentage Yield) is the annualized compound rate of return earned by locking cryptocurrency tokens in a staking mechanism — whether that means running or delegating to a Proof-of-Stake validator, locking tokens in a protocol’s staking contract for governance rewards, or supplying liquidity in exchange for protocol emissions — expressed as the effective annual yield after accounting for the compounding of rewards, as opposed to APR (Annual Percentage Rate), which states the simple interest rate before compounding effects. In DeFi, “staking APY” is used loosely across several meaningfully different contexts: native PoS validator rewards, liquid staking protocol yields, and protocol-incentivized “staking” that is really just liquidity mining under another name — each carrying fundamentally different risk profiles despite similar labels.


APY vs. APR

The distinction between APY and APR is critical for evaluating staking returns:

APR APY
Definition Simple annual rate, no compounding Effective annual rate with compounding
Formula Rate × Time (1 + Rate/n)^n − 1
When equal Only when n = 1 (annually compounded)
Higher figure APR is lower APY is higher (except at very low rates)
Favored by Protocols quoting borrow costs Protocols marketing deposit yields

Example: A 10% APR compounded daily becomes:

$$text{APY} = left(1 + frac{0.10}{365}right)^{365} – 1 approx 10.52%$$

Protocols often quote the more attractive number. A lending protocol might quote APY on supply rates (to look higher) and APR on borrow rates (to look lower) — both technically accurate, but intentionally asymmetric.


Types of Staking and Their APY Sources

1. Native Proof-of-Stake Validation

Example: Ethereum staking yields ~3–4% APY (2024–2025), funded by ETH issuance to validators and priority fees

Characteristics:

  • Denominated in the native token
  • Real yield component (fees) + inflationary component (issuance)
  • Rate decreases as more ETH is staked (yield dilutes across more validators)

Ethereum staking APY formula:

$$text{APY} approx frac{text{Base rewards} + text{MEV} + text{Priority fees}}{text{Total staked ETH}} times text{Compounding factor}$$

2. Liquid Staking Protocol Yield

Example: stETH earns ~3.5% APY (Ethereum base yield minus Lido’s 10% cut)

Characteristics:

  • Auto-compounds via rebasing (stETH) or exchange rate growth (wstETH, rETH)
  • Yield is “real” in the sense it comes from actual network security work
  • Slight discount to raw validator yield due to protocol fees

3. Protocol-Native Staking (Governance/Revenue Sharing)

Example: GMX stakers earn ETH/AVAX fees + esGMX emissions; Curve veCRV holders earn 3CRV fees

Characteristics:

  • Fee component is “real yield” (from actual protocol usage)
  • Emission component is inflationary (existing holders are diluted)
  • Yield varies with protocol usage volume

4. Incentivized/Liquidity Mining “Staking”

Example: Depositing LP tokens into a farm and earning token X as reward

Characteristics:

  • Not true staking — the underlying asset is earning emissions, not network rewards
  • Yield is inflationary by definition (new tokens created)
  • Highly variable; typically front-loaded and unsustainable long-term
  • APYs of 100–10,000% in early DeFi protocols were almost entirely this category

What Drives Staking APY

For PoS Networks:

|—|—|

| More validators join | APY decreases (rewards split among more) |

| Network activity / gas fees increase | APY increases |

| Token price increases (if APY in USD) | APY increases in dollar terms |

| Inflation rate reduced (e.g., Ethereum’s EIP-1559) | Less inflationary pressure |

For Protocol Staking:

|—|—|

| More tokens staked | APY decreases (same rewards, more recipients) |

| Protocol fee revenue increases | APY increases |

| Token emissions reduced | APY decreases |

| Token price increases (for emission rewards) | APY increases in USD terms |


Real Yield vs. Inflationary Yield

One of the most important distinctions in evaluating staking APY:

Real Yield: Denominated in assets earned from actual protocol revenue (fees, spreads). If you earn 5% APY in ETH from staking ETH, that ETH came from transaction fees and block rewards — real economic activity.

Inflationary Yield: Denominated in newly created tokens. Earning 50% APY in “FARM” tokens that are being continuously minted means existing holders are diluted. The 50% APY is not additive to your real purchasing power — it reflects the rate of dilution being distributed to you rather than to others.

“`

Staking 1,000 FARM at 50% APY inflationary:

Year 1: 1,500 FARM tokens

But total supply also grew 50% — so your % ownership is unchanged

Real return ≈ 0% (minus any price impact of inflation)

“`

Real yield protocols became a major narrative in 2022 (GMX, dYdX) as a contrast to the unsustainable emission-based yields of 2021.


Compounding Frequency

Staking APY assumes reinvestment of rewards. In practice, gas costs and minimum reinvestment thresholds affect the realistic compounding frequency:

Network Reward Frequency Practical Compounding
Ethereum (solo staking) Every epoch (~6.4 min) Typically monthly/quarterly
stETH (Lido) Daily rebase Continuous (automatic)
Cosmos chains Per block Typically daily via auto-compound scripts
Solana Every epoch (~2.5 days) Per epoch (automatic)
Protocol staking (Ethereum L2s) Variable Manual claim + reinvest

Auto-compounding protocols (Yearn, Beefy, Convex) automatically reinvest rewards on behalf of depositors, converting claimed emissions into more of the underlying asset.


History

  • 2020: DeFi Summer; protocols offer 100–10,000% “staking APY” — almost entirely unsustainable token emissions
  • 2020–2021: Yield farming / liquidity mining becomes synonymous with “high staking APY”
  • September 2022: Ethereum Merge; ~5–6% ETH staking APY drives $20B+ into staking
  • 2022: Post-LUNA collapse; “real yield” narrative emerges as sustainable alternative to inflationary emissions
  • 2023: Rising Fed rates (4–5% T-bill yield) create competition for on-chain staking yields; Maker’s 8% DSR briefly made DAI savings more attractive than ETH staking
  • 2024–2025: ETH staking APY stabilizes ~3–4% as total staked ETH surpasses 30% of supply; real yield protocols become standard expectation

See Also