Crypto isn’t just for trading. You can lend your coins to earn interest, just like a savings account — but with much higher rates.
There are two ways to earn interest: DeFi (decentralized finance, no middleman) and CeFi (centralized finance, companies that lend your crypto). Both have pros and cons.
What Is CeFi Interest?
CeFi platforms are companies that take your crypto deposits and lend them out to borrowers (traders, institutions, margin traders). You earn interest on your deposit, and the platform takes a cut.
Examples: Nexo, YouHodler, Coinbase Earn, Binance Earn
How it works:
- You deposit USDC or ETH on the platform
- The platform lends your crypto to borrowers
- Borrowers pay interest
- You receive a portion of that interest
CeFi Pros
- Easy to use — Deposit and earn, no technical knowledge needed
- Fixed rates — Many platforms advertise specific APY rates
- Customer support — Help when something goes wrong
CeFi Cons
- Counterparty risk — If the platform goes bankrupt, your funds may be lost (Celsius, BlockFi, FTX all failed)
- Not your keys — The platform controls your crypto
- Withdrawal limits — Some platforms limit how much you can withdraw
What Is DeFi Interest?
DeFi lending happens on decentralized protocols like Aave, Compound, and Curve. There’s no company — just smart contracts that automatically match lenders with borrowers.
How it works:
- You connect your wallet (MetaMask, Trust Wallet)
- You deposit USDC into Aave’s lending pool
- Borrowers borrow from the same pool
- Interest rates adjust automatically based on supply and demand
- You earn interest directly in your wallet
DeFi Pros
- You control your funds — Crypto stays in smart contracts, not a company
- Transparent — All transactions visible on the blockchain
- No KYC — No identity verification needed
- Global access — Works the same in every country
DeFi Cons
- Harder to use — Requires understanding of wallets, gas fees, and smart contracts
- Smart contract risk — Bugs in the code could lead to loss of funds
- Variable rates — Interest rates change constantly based on demand
- Gas fees — Depositing and withdrawing costs transaction fees
Comparison Table
| Feature | CeFi | DeFi |
|---|---|---|
| Control | Company holds your crypto | You hold your crypto |
| Interest rate | Fixed or tiered | Variable (supply/demand) |
| Risk | Company bankruptcy | Smart contract bugs |
| Ease of use | Very easy | Moderate |
| KYC required | Usually yes | No |
| Typical APY (USDC) | 4-12% | 5-15% |
| Customer support | Yes | No (community only) |
| Best for | Beginners | Experienced users |
Interest Rates by Platform and Asset
CeFi Rates (approximate)
| Platform | USDC | ETH | BTC |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nexo | 8-12% | 4-6% | 3-5% |
| YouHodler | 7-10% | 4-5% | 3-4% |
| Coinbase | 4-5% | 2-3% | 1-2% |
| Binance | 5-8% | 3-5% | 2-4% |
DeFi Rates (approximate, variable)
| Protocol | USDC | ETH | DAI |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aave | 5-10% | 1-3% | 5-12% |
| Compound | 4-8% | 1-2% | 4-10% |
| Morpho | 6-12% | 2-4% | 6-14% |
Which Should You Choose?
Choose CeFi if:
- You’re a beginner and want simplicity
- You prefer fixed rates
- You want customer support
- You’re depositing small amounts
Choose DeFi if:
- You’ve been using crypto for a while
- You want full control of your funds
- You don’t want to trust a company
- You’re depositing larger amounts
The Hybrid Approach (Recommended)
- Use CeFi for small amounts (under $1,000) where ease matters
- Use DeFi for larger amounts where security matters
- Never deposit more than $10,000 on any single CeFi platform
- Diversify across at least 3 different protocols/platforms
Safety Tips
- Start small — Test any platform with $50 before depositing more
- Check audit history — DeFi protocols should be audited by reputable firms
- Monitor your positions — Check that interest is being paid regularly
- Understand lock-up periods — Some platforms lock your funds for a fixed time
- Never chase the highest rate — Extremely high rates (20%+) signal desperation
Verdict
Earning interest on crypto is straightforward. CeFi is easier but riskier. DeFi is safer (if you know what you’re doing) but takes more effort.
Best strategy: deposit stablecoins on Aave (DeFi) for 5-12% APY with full control. Use CeFi platforms for small amounts where convenience matters more.
This question appears weekly on BitcoinTalk. The community generally recommends DeFi over CeFi after the Celsius and BlockFi collapses.