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    Home»Reviews»What Is DeFi? The Complete Guide (2026)
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    What Is DeFi? The Complete Guide (2026)

    January 6, 2026Updated:April 7, 2026Sarah ColeBy Sarah Cole
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    DeFi, short for Decentralized Finance, is a global system of financial services that runs on blockchain technology without banks, brokers, or any central institution. Anyone with an internet connection and a crypto wallet can lend, borrow, trade, earn interest, and access financial instruments that were previously reserved for institutions or required expensive intermediaries.

    In 2026, DeFi has moved from an experimental niche into a functioning financial infrastructure layer with approximately $130–140 billion in total value locked across protocols. BlackRock has listed its tokenized Treasury fund on Uniswap. Grayscale has filed for an Aave ETF. Aave V4 launched in March 2026 with architecture designed to handle trillions in assets. The question is no longer whether DeFi works, but how fast it can scale.


    How DeFi works

    Traditional finance operates through intermediaries. When you take out a loan, a bank decides whether to give it to you, sets the terms, holds your collateral, and takes a fee. When you trade stocks, a broker executes the trade on your behalf and a clearinghouse settles it. These intermediaries add friction, cost, and gatekeeping to every financial transaction.

    DeFi replaces intermediaries with smart contracts which are self-executing codes stored on a blockchain that run automatically when conditions are met. A DeFi lending protocol does not have a loan officer. When you deposit collateral and request a loan, the smart contract checks the collateral, issues the funds, and manages repayment all automatically, transparently, and without anyone’s permission.

    Because DeFi operates on public blockchains, every transaction is verifiable by anyone. There are no hidden fees, no opaque counterparties, and no ability to change the rules after you have entered a contract. The trade-off is that there is also no customer support. If you make a mistake, lose your private keys, or interact with a malicious contract, there is nobody to call.

    $130–140B
    Total Value Locked across all DeFi protocols — early 2026
    $27B
    Aave TVL — the largest lending protocol in DeFi
    68%
    Share of total DeFi TVL hosted on Ethereum
    Mar 30
    Aave V4 mainnet launch — hub-and-spoke architecture for trillions in assets

    The core building blocks of DeFi

    Decentralized exchanges (DEXs) allow users to swap cryptocurrencies directly from their wallets using automated liquidity pools rather than order books. Uniswap is the largest DEX by volume, processing between 50–65% of weekly DEX volume. Unlike centralized exchanges, you retain custody of your assets throughout the entire trade.

    Lending and borrowing protocols allow users to deposit crypto to earn interest, or borrow against their holdings without credit checks, identity verification, or approval processes. Aave is the largest lending protocol with approximately $27 billion in TVL. Compound pioneered algorithmic lending rates that adjust automatically based on supply and demand.

    Liquid staking allows users to stake assets like ETH to earn validator rewards while receiving a liquid token representing their staked position which can then be used elsewhere in DeFi. Lido is the largest liquid staking protocol with approximately $27.5 billion in TVL, making it the largest single DeFi protocol by that measure.

    Yield farming and liquidity provision allow users to earn fees and rewards by depositing assets into protocol liquidity pools. Curve specializes in efficient stablecoin swaps. MakerDAO manages the DAI stablecoin through a system of collateralized debt positions.

    Restaking is a newer category pioneered by EigenLayer, which allows staked ETH to be reused as collateral to secure additional blockchain networks and services, earning additional yield in exchange for additional risk. EigenLayer holds approximately $13 billion in TVL.


    Who is actually using DeFi in 2026

    The demographics of DeFi have shifted significantly. In 2020–2021, DeFi was almost entirely retail-driven by individual users experimenting with yield farming and speculation. By 2026, institutional participation has become a primary driver of TVL.

    BlackRock listed its $2.2 billion BUIDL tokenized Treasury fund on Uniswap in February 2026. This was the first time the world’s largest asset manager formally engaged with DeFi infrastructure. As part of the move, BlackRock purchased Uniswap governance tokens, tying its asset management business directly into DeFi decision-making. Grayscale has filed for an Aave ETF, which if approved would be the first regulated investment product giving exposure to a DeFi protocol’s governance token.

    MakerDAO, now rebranded as Sky, has allocated over $2 billion of its reserves to tokenized real-world assets including U.S. Treasuries. RWA revenue now accounts for over 60% of Maker’s total income, fundamentally changing the protocol from one reliant on crypto collateral to one backed by real-world yield.

    Aave’s Horizon product is targeting institutional RWA lending, with a goal of scaling net deposits beyond $1 billion through institutional partnerships. Aave V4, which launched on March 30, 2026, introduces a hub-and-spoke architecture designed to handle shared cross-chain liquidity at a scale the protocol describes as targeting “trillions in assets.”

    📌 Related on DailyCoinRadar

    For a deeper look at how institutional capital — BlackRock, JPMorgan, MakerDAO — is reshaping DeFi and the broader tokenization wave:

    ⟶ Institutional Adoption and Tokenization: Crypto’s Shift Toward Real-World Finance ⟶ DeFi in 2026: Why It’s Quietly Strengthening While Crypto Markets Turn Defensive

    Total Value Locked — what it means and what it doesn’t

    Total Value Locked (TVL) is the primary metric used to measure DeFi’s size. It represents the dollar value of all assets deposited into DeFi smart contracts across all protocols and chains. As of early 2026, DeFi TVL sits at approximately $130–140 billion, down from a peak of around $178 billion in October 2025 but significantly above the post-FTX low of approximately $50 billion in late 2022.

    The important nuance is that most TVL moves come from asset price changes, not capital flows. When ETH falls 38%, the dollar value of ETH locked in DeFi contracts falls proportionally even if no user has withdrawn anything. This is why a $55 billion TVL drop can happen without any meaningful exodus of capital. DeFi’s multi-year chart shows a clear structure of higher highs and higher lows since late 2023. This shows a maturing sector rather than a collapsing one.

    Ethereum hosts approximately 68% of all DeFi TVL, making it the dominant DeFi chain by a wide margin. Solana has emerged as a clear second with approximately $9.2 billion in TVL. Ethereum Layer 2 networks, Arbitrum, Optimism and Base, collectively hold around $9 billion in DeFi TVL and are where the majority of retail DeFi activity is migrating due to lower fees.


    The risks you need to understand

    DeFi is genuinely useful and genuinely risky. The risks are not reasons to avoid it but rather things you need to understand before using it.

    Smart contract risk is the most fundamental. DeFi protocols are code. Code can have bugs. When a DeFi hack occurs, funds are typically gone permanently, there is no insurance, no regulator to complain to, and no recourse. Over $3 billion was lost to DeFi exploits in 2025. Using only audited, long-established protocols significantly reduces but does not eliminate this risk.

    Liquidation risk applies to any DeFi position involving borrowed funds. If your collateral value falls below a threshold, the protocol automatically liquidates it. This happens instantly and without warning, there is no bank manager to call for an extension.

    Oracle risk is specific to DeFi. Smart contracts cannot access off-chain data themselves, they rely on oracle networks like Chainlink to feed in price data. If an oracle is manipulated or fails, positions built on that price data can be incorrectly liquidated or exploited.

    Regulatory risk is evolving. DeFi currently operates in a largely unregulated space, which is both its strength and its vulnerability. Regulatory frameworks in the U.S. and EU are actively developing rules that will apply to some or all DeFi activity. The outcome of the CLARITY Act and MiCA’s DeFi provisions will significantly shape what is and is not permissible in the world’s two largest financial markets.


    DeFi vs traditional finance — the honest comparison

    DeFi’s advantages over traditional finance are real: permissionless access, 24/7 availability, transparent operations, no gatekeepers, and self-custody of assets. In markets where traditional banking is slow, expensive, or simply unavailable, DeFi offers genuine alternatives. Supplying stablecoins on Aave V3 currently yields approximately 2.5% APY, above FDIC-insured savings accounts but below the Federal Reserve’s current policy rate, reflecting DeFi’s efficiency in a high-rate environment.

    DeFi’s disadvantages are equally real: no consumer protections, no recourse for errors, high technical complexity, smart contract risk, and a regulatory environment that remains unresolved. Traditional finance offers slower, more expensive services but also consumer protection, dispute resolution, and a legal framework that most people depend on without realising it.

    The trajectory is toward convergence rather than replacement. Institutions are bringing regulated capital into DeFi infrastructure. DeFi protocols are building compliant products for institutional users. The line between TradFi and DeFi is becoming less clear every quarter.


    Frequently asked questions

    Is DeFi safe? It depends on how you use it. Established, audited protocols like Aave and Uniswap have long security track records but are not immune to risk. Newer or unaudited protocols carry significantly higher risk. Never put more into DeFi than you can afford to lose entirely.

    Do I need to give up my crypto to use DeFi? No, DeFi is non-custodial. You connect your wallet to a protocol, authorise a transaction, and retain control of your assets throughout. The protocol never holds your funds in the way a bank does.

    What is TVL and why does it matter? TVL stands for Total Value Locked, the total dollar value of assets deposited in a DeFi protocol. It is the primary benchmark for comparing protocol size and user confidence.

    What is the difference between DeFi and CeFi? CeFi (Centralized Finance) refers to crypto platforms like Coinbase or Binance that are run by companies with traditional business structures, compliance teams, and customer support. DeFi has no company, no customer support, and no central control, only code.

    Can I lose all my money in DeFi? Yes. Smart contract exploits, liquidations, and user error have all caused permanent total losses. Risk management is not optional in DeFi.

    📌 Ready to explore DeFi?
    ⟶ What is Ethereum? — The blockchain that powers most of DeFi ⟶ Crypto Wallet Setup: A Complete Beginner’s Guide ⟶ Crypto Security Practices: Essential Steps to Protect Your Assets

    This article is regularly updated to reflect current protocol developments and market conditions.

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    Sarah Cole
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    Sarah Cole specialises in making cryptocurrency accessible to everyday investors. With a background in financial education and five years of experience writing about digital assets, Sarah focuses on breaking down complex topics, from setting up your first wallet to understanding DeFi, into clear, actionable guides. At DailyCoinRadar she leads the guides and education section, helping readers at every level navigate the crypto space with confidence.

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