Key Takeaways
- Aave is the largest DeFi lending protocol with over $15 billion in total value locked
- You can earn interest by depositing assets or borrow by putting up collateral
- Aave introduced 'flash loans' — loans that must be repaid within a single transaction
- All loans are overcollateralized, meaning you must deposit more than you borrow
What Is Aave?
Aave (pronounced 'ah-veh,' Finnish for 'ghost') is a decentralized lending protocol that runs on Ethereum and several other blockchains. It's one of the oldest and largest DeFi protocols, with over $15 billion in total value locked as of early 2026.
In simple terms, Aave is a lending market without a bank in the middle. Depositors supply assets to earn interest. Borrowers take loans by putting up crypto as collateral. Smart contracts handle everything automatically — no loan officers, no credit checks, no waiting.
How Does Aave Work?
Aave operates through liquidity pools:
- Depositors add assets (ETH, USDC, WBTC, etc.) to a pool and receive 'aTokens' that automatically earn interest
- Borrowers lock up collateral worth more than they want to borrow — typically 120–150% of the loan value
- Interest rates adjust automatically based on supply and demand
- If a borrower's collateral drops below a minimum ratio, liquidators can automatically repay the loan and claim a fee
What Are Flash Loans?
Aave invented a product called a flash loan — a loan with no collateral that must be borrowed and repaid within a single blockchain transaction. If you can't repay in the same block, the entire transaction is automatically reversed.
Flash loans sound bizarre, but they're used for legitimate purposes: arbitrage trading, refinancing positions across protocols, and liquidating underwater loans. They also get used for attacks on vulnerable DeFi protocols, which is why they have a controversial reputation.
How Is Aave Different From a Bank?
| Aave | Traditional Bank |
|---|---|
| No identity verification required | KYC/AML required |
| Overcollateralized loans only | Unsecured loans available |
| Rates set by algorithm | Rates set by bank |
| 24/7, instant settlement | Business hours, days to settle |
| Smart contract risk | Bank failure risk (FDIC insured) |
| No deposit insurance | FDIC insures up to $250,000 |
What Are the Risks?
Aave is audited and battle-tested, but DeFi is never risk-free:
- Smart contract risk: Bugs in Aave's code could lead to losses — this has happened to other protocols
- Liquidation risk: If you're borrowing against volatile collateral, a price drop can trigger automatic liquidation
- Oracle manipulation: Aave relies on price feeds to value collateral — if those feeds are wrong or manipulated, bad things can happen
- No FDIC insurance: There is no government backstop if something goes wrong
For most users, the safest approach is depositing stablecoins to earn yield — lower risk than borrowing or using volatile collateral.