Vote-Escrow (veToken) Model

The vote-escrow model is a tokenomics design where users lock governance tokens for a chosen period in exchange for a non-liquid “ve” token (vote-escrowed token) that grants elevated governance power, higher yield boosts, and protocol fee sharing. Introduced by Curve Finance with veCRV in 2020, it became one of the most influential DeFi tokenomics designs ever created.


How Vote-Escrow Works

The Core Mechanic:

  1. User locks CRV (or protocol token) for a period (1 week to 4 years)
  2. User receives veCRV proportional to: amount locked × time remaining
  3. veCRV is non-transferable and decays toward zero as the lock approaches expiry
  4. veCRV grants: yield boosts, gauge voting rights, protocol fee revenue

Why Lock?

  • Yield boost: veCRV holders earn up to 2.5× more CRV on Curve liquidity positions
  • Gauge votes: veCRV holders vote on which Curve pools receive CRV emissions
  • Fee revenue: 50% of Curve trading fees distributed to veCRV holders in 3CRV

The Curve Wars

The power to vote on Curve gauge weights became enormously valuable because:

  • Curve gauge votes determine which pools attract CRV yield
  • Protocols whose stablecoins live in Curve pools need CRV emissions to stay liquid
  • This created a market for veCRV voting power — the “Curve Wars”

Key actors in the Curve Wars:

  • Convex Finance (vlCVX): Aggregated veCRV for depositors, taking a dominant position in gauge votes; Convex controls a majority of all veCRV
  • Votium: Bribe marketplace where protocols pay CRV/CVX holders to vote for their pools
  • Frax, Abracadabra, Terra (historically): Competed aggressively for Curve gauge dominance

veToken Adoption

Dozens of protocols adopted the ve model:

Protocol ve Token
Curve veCRV
Balancer veBAL
AURA vlAURA
Velodrome veVELO
Aerodrome veAERO
Pendle vePENDLE

Criticisms

  • Illiquidity: Locked tokens can’t be sold if price drops or emergency arises
  • Plutocracy: Large holders dominate votes
  • Complexity: Hard for retail users to understand optimal locking strategies

Sources

  • Curve Finance documentation: resources.curve.fi
  • Convex Finance: convexfinance.com
  • Votium bribe marketplace: votium.app