
What Is Liquid Staking in Crypto?
Last Updated: June 2026
Staking has become one of the most popular ways to earn passive yield on proof-of-stake cryptocurrencies, but the traditional model comes with a significant drawback: your assets are locked. Liquid staking solves this by issuing a tradeable derivative token that represents your staked position, letting you keep earning validator rewards while still being able to deploy capital elsewhere. Whether you are exploring crypto futures, spot trading, or DeFi yield strategies, understanding liquid staking is increasingly essential for any serious crypto participant.
How Traditional Staking Works — and Why It Falls Short
In a standard proof-of-stake network like Ethereum, validators must lock up a minimum amount of tokens (32 ETH on Ethereum's native layer) to participate in block production. Delegators can stake smaller amounts through pooling services, but those funds are still subject to an unbonding period — typically anywhere from a few days to three weeks depending on the chain. During that window you cannot sell, trade, or use the staked tokens as collateral.
This creates a capital efficiency problem. If prices move sharply, you cannot exit quickly. If a better yield opportunity emerges in a lending protocol or a crypto exchange, you cannot redirect your capital without waiting out the unbonding queue. For large holders, the opportunity cost of locked capital is substantial.
What Liquid Staking Actually Does
Liquid staking protocols — such as Lido Finance, Rocket Pool, and Marinade Finance — act as intermediaries between depositors and validators. When you deposit ETH into Lido, for example, you receive stETH (staked ETH) in return at a near 1:1 ratio. The protocol deploys your ETH to a curated set of validators and passes the staking rewards back to you through a daily rebase of your stETH balance.
The key innovation is that stETH is a standard ERC-20 token. You can:
- Trade it on decentralized exchanges at any time without waiting for unbonding.
- Use it as collateral on lending platforms like Aave to borrow other assets.
- Provide liquidity in stETH/ETH pools to earn additional trading fees on top of staking yields.
- Bridge it to Layer 2 networks where transaction costs are lower.
The result is that your capital continues earning staking rewards while remaining productive in the broader DeFi ecosystem.
Liquid Staking vs. Traditional Staking: Key Differences
| Feature | Traditional Staking | Liquid Staking | |---|---|---| | Asset accessibility | Locked during unbonding | Tradeable via derivative token | | Minimum deposit | Often high (e.g. 32 ETH) | Typically any amount | | Reward distribution | At unbonding or epoch end | Continuous rebase or token appreciation | | Smart contract risk | Lower (native protocol) | Higher (additional protocol layer) | | Capital efficiency | Low | High — usable in DeFi | | Slashing exposure | Direct | Spread across validator set |
The table makes the trade-off clear: liquid staking dramatically improves capital efficiency but introduces an extra layer of smart contract risk and the possibility that the derivative token temporarily depegs from its underlying asset during market stress.
Risks to Understand Before Committing Capital
Smart contract vulnerabilities are the most acute risk. Liquid staking protocols hold billions of dollars in assets and are a high-value target for exploits. Even well-audited protocols have suffered incidents. Always verify that a protocol has undergone multiple independent audits and carries a meaningful bug bounty program.
Validator slashing occurs when a validator behaves maliciously or goes offline repeatedly. On Ethereum, slashing permanently destroys a portion of the validator's staked ETH. Most liquid staking protocols distribute slashing losses across all depositors proportionally, which cushions the blow but does not eliminate it.
Depeg risk is the possibility that the liquid staking token trades below the value of the underlying asset. During periods of high market stress or protocol uncertainty, stETH has historically traded at a discount to ETH. If you need to exit quickly by selling the token rather than redeeming through the protocol, you may realize a loss relative to the face value of your staked position.
Trading Liquid Staking Tokens on EVEDEX
EVEDEX supports trading of major liquid staking tokens against both stablecoin pairs and other crypto assets, giving you flexible options for managing your staked positions. If you hold stETH or similar derivatives and want to hedge directional exposure, you can open a short position via leverage trading on the underlying asset — for example, shorting ETH futures while holding stETH — effectively delta-neutralizing your position so you collect staking yield without bearing full price risk.
The platform's perpetual futures markets allow you to adjust exposure in real time without interacting with the underlying staking protocol's unbonding queue. This is particularly useful during periods of high network congestion, when on-chain redemptions may slow down. Combining liquid staking's yield with EVEDEX's hedging tools gives sophisticated traders a more complete toolkit for managing both yield and risk simultaneously.
Liquid staking represents a genuine improvement in how proof-of-stake networks allocate capital. By converting locked validator positions into freely tradeable tokens, it allows participants to earn network security rewards without sacrificing the optionality that active traders and DeFi participants require. As always, position sizing relative to the added protocol risk is the key discipline — liquid staking is a tool, not a guaranteed free lunch.



