
How to Stake Polygon and Earn Rewards
Last Updated: June 2026
Polygon (formerly MATIC, now transitioning to the POL token) is one of the most widely used Ethereum scaling networks, and its delegated proof-of-stake model gives ordinary holders a straightforward way to earn passive income. Unlike some chains that require you to run your own node, Polygon lets you delegate your tokens to an existing validator and collect a share of their rewards. Whether you hold POL from a crypto exchange or acquired it through spot trading, this guide walks you through the entire staking process — from choosing a validator to claiming your earnings — with accurate, up-to-date information about how Polygon's staking mechanism actually works.
Understanding Polygon's Staking Architecture
Polygon's mainnet security relies on a set of validators who produce blocks and submit periodic checkpoints to the Ethereum mainnet. These validators must stake a significant amount of POL themselves, and they accept delegations from other token holders who want to participate without operating infrastructure.
The protocol uses a two-layer model: the Bor layer handles block production on the Polygon side chain, while the Heimdall layer manages validator coordination and checkpoint submission to Ethereum. Rewards originate from two sources: a fixed emission from the protocol's staking reward pool (historically around 5-12% APR depending on total staked supply) and transaction fees earned by validators. As more tokens are staked network-wide, the per-token yield decreases, so actual returns vary over time. You can always check the current estimated APR on the official Polygon staking dashboard before committing funds.
Step-by-Step: How to Stake POL via Delegation
Delegating on Polygon requires a wallet holding POL on Ethereum mainnet (not the Polygon side chain) because staking contracts live on Ethereum. Follow these steps:
- Bridge or buy POL on Ethereum mainnet. If your POL is on the Polygon network, use the official Polygon Bridge to move it to Ethereum L1, since the staking contract resides there.
- Connect your wallet. Go to staking.polygon.technology and connect MetaMask or any WalletConnect-compatible wallet. Ensure your wallet is set to the Ethereum mainnet.
- Browse validators. The dashboard lists all active validators with their commission rates, uptime scores, and total delegated stake. Sort by uptime to surface the most reliable nodes.
- Delegate your POL. Click your chosen validator, enter the amount you want to delegate, and confirm two transactions: one to approve the staking contract and one to execute the delegation. Both require ETH for gas.
- Monitor and claim rewards. Rewards appear in your delegation dashboard in real time. Click "Claim Reward" when you want to collect, keeping in mind this also costs a small ETH gas fee.
- Re-stake to compound. Claimed rewards arrive as POL on Ethereum mainnet. To compound, repeat the delegation step with the newly claimed tokens.
Comparing Staking Options: Self-Delegation vs. Third-Party Platforms
Not every holder wants to manage Ethereum gas costs directly. Several alternatives exist, each with different trade-offs:
| Method | Custody | Typical APR | Unbonding Period | Gas Required | |---|---|---|---|---| | Polygon Native Staking (delegation) | Self-custody | ~4-10% | ~9 days | Yes (ETH) | | Centralized exchange staking | Custodial | ~3-7% | Varies (often instant) | No | | Liquid staking (e.g., stMATIC) | Self-custody | ~4-8% | Varies by protocol | Yes (ETH/Polygon) | | DeFi yield strategies | Self-custody | Variable | None (liquidity pools) | Yes |
Native delegation keeps you fully in control of your keys and earns the base protocol reward, but every interaction — delegating, claiming, unbonding — triggers an Ethereum transaction fee. Liquid staking tokens like stMATIC let you retain liquidity while earning staking yields, at the cost of smart contract risk. Centralized exchange staking is simplest but means you do not control the private keys, which is a meaningful security consideration.
Trading POL on EVEDEX Before or After Staking
If you are deciding how to allocate your POL holdings between staking and active trading, EVEDEX offers a non-custodial environment to execute your strategy. You can use leverage trading or crypto futures on POL pairs to speculate on price movements while keeping a separate portion of your holdings staked for passive yield. This split approach lets you benefit from both the compounding nature of staking rewards and the potential upside of directional trades.
To move funds between EVEDEX and staking: withdraw POL from EVEDEX to your personal wallet, bridge to Ethereum mainnet if necessary, then delegate through the Polygon staking portal. When you want to trade again, initiate unbonding, wait out the ~9-day period, and deposit back to EVEDEX. Planning around the unbonding window is essential — if you anticipate needing liquidity quickly, liquid staking tokens may suit your workflow better than native delegation.
Risk Factors to Keep in Mind
Polygon staking is relatively low-risk compared to more complex DeFi strategies, but it is not risk-free. Slashing can occur if a validator behaves maliciously (e.g., double-signing), which would reduce both the validator's stake and their delegators' principal. Choosing validators with long track records and high uptime reduces this exposure significantly. Additionally, smart contract risk exists on any chain, and the unbonding period creates price exposure: if POL's market price drops sharply during the 9-day window, you cannot exit quickly. Staying informed about Polygon's ongoing transition from MATIC to POL and any protocol upgrades is also advisable, as tokenomics and reward structures may evolve.



