
Total Value Locked (TVL) refers to the aggregate value of assets locked within a blockchain protocol or network.
Commonly abbreviated as TVL and typically denominated in USD, this metric is used to measure the scale of user funds deposited, staked, or provided as liquidity within a specific blockchain or decentralized application (dApp). A higher TVL generally indicates deeper liquidity and larger available pools, though it may also reflect inflation due to price volatility or inconsistencies in calculation methods.
TVL calculations encompass decentralized exchange liquidity pools, lending protocol deposits, staking and restaking positions, among others. Different data providers (such as DeFiLlama) may use varying methodologies—some attempt to remove duplicates, while others rely on self-reported figures from protocols. It’s important to consider these nuances when interpreting TVL data.
TVL serves as an intuitive indicator of capital activity and liquidity depth.
For newcomers, TVL can be likened to the “volume of water in a pool”—more water means less price slippage and larger available limits for swaps or borrowing. For project teams or analysts, TVL provides insight into user retention, incentive effectiveness, and safety margins (such as whether there is sufficient collateral for liquidations).
For example, a decentralized exchange launching liquidity rewards may see its pool’s TVL rise alongside improved trading depth; an increase in lending protocol TVL often signals more collateral and expanded borrowing capacity. However, if incentives end, TVL may drop quickly, highlighting the risk of “short-term liquidity.”
TVL is generally calculated as “amount of locked assets × current price.”
In Automated Market Makers (AMMs), TVL equals the combined USD value of all token balances in the pool. For instance, if a pool contains 1,000 ETH and 2,000,000 USDC—with ETH priced at $2,000 and USDC pegged at $1—the TVL would be approximately 1,000×2,000 + 2,000,000×1 = $4,000,000.
In lending protocols, TVL refers to the total assets deposited for lending by users. For staking or restaking, it represents the USD value of all staked tokens. Prices are typically sourced from oracles, which provide external price feeds to smart contracts, or are calculated using exchange averages by data providers.
Key considerations include:
TVL is most commonly referenced in DeFi and staking contexts and is often displayed by exchanges as a measure of “pool depth.”
On decentralized exchanges (DEXes) (DEX), TVL reflects the total value of tokens provided by liquidity providers (LPs). Higher TVL usually means lower slippage for large trades. In lending protocols, TVL determines the upper limit of funds available to borrowers and influences both borrowing rates and liquidation thresholds. For staking and restaking, TVL shows how much capital users have locked to earn rewards or enhance network security.
Centralized platforms may also display TVL or “fund size” on product pages. For instance, on Gate’s liquidity mining or financial product pages, a higher TVL signals deeper pools where large transactions have less impact on returns and prices; however, it should be evaluated alongside trading volume and annualized returns.
To reduce the risk of misjudging TVL, follow these steps:
Common risks include: funds exiting when incentives end; protocol exploits; rapid price crashes triggering liquidations; double-counting across protocols; and abrupt capital outflows.
According to public data, TVL has seen significant peaks, corrections, and structural shifts over recent years.
Based on statistics from sources like DeFiLlama: The all-time high for cross-chain TVL was around $180 billion in 2021; during the 2022 bear market it dropped near $50 billion; throughout 2023 it fluctuated between $40–60 billion (based on data available up to 2024—always refer to real-time figures).
In 2024, overall TVL rebounded compared to 2023, generally ranging between $70–100 billion. Key drivers included the expansion of Ethereum staking and restaking ecosystems, increased activity on Layer 2 networks (such as Arbitrum, Optimism, Base), and the resurgence of stablecoin supplies (figures based on public sources for 2024; methodology may vary by platform).
Recent market focus has shifted from single metrics to structural changes:
To track real-time trends: use DeFiLlama or official project dashboards; filter by deduplication methods, chain, or protocol; compare yearly or six-month trends; combine with protocol revenue and trading volume to assess whether capital is actively utilized.
These metrics measure different aspects—do not use them interchangeably.
FDV (Fully Diluted Valuation) is an estimate of total market capitalization if all possible tokens were circulating at current prices. FDV is not equivalent to TVL or current market cap. High FDV with low TVL may indicate shallow pools with high price sensitivity to individual trades; high TVL with low FDV may mean deep capital reserves but unreflected valuations—always consider token unlock schedules and revenue alongside these metrics.
When analyzing a protocol, consider all four dimensions: “TVL + trading volume + protocol revenue + circulating supply & FDV.” TVL gauges reserves; trading volume shows activity; revenue measures sustainability; FDV helps assess valuation pressures.
Total Value Locked (TVL) is a key indicator for assessing the security and user confidence of DeFi platforms. Higher TVL signals greater user willingness to deposit funds—reflecting a protocol’s attractiveness and credibility. For investors, TVL helps determine whether a DeFi project is gaining market acceptance and serves as an important reference for evaluating project health.
You can visit DeFi analytics sites such as DefiLlama or DeFi Pulse for real-time TVL rankings across protocols. Many exchanges like Gate also display relevant data under their DeFi sections. Alternatively, check project dashboards directly on official websites. It’s best practice to compare data from multiple sources for accuracy.
A decrease in TVL usually indicates that users are withdrawing funds from the platform. Possible reasons include declining yields, security concerns, market fluctuations, or users shifting elsewhere. However, short-term volatility is normal—do not overinterpret without considering project developments and overall market conditions.
High TVL does not guarantee safety—this is a common misconception. While high TVL shows user trust, it can also attract hackers. Several high-TVL projects have experienced exploits in the past. Assess platform safety through code audits, team background checks, risk management practices, and by using reputable platforms like Gate for added security.
TVL can help you gauge project popularity but should not be your sole investment criterion. Combine it with analysis of whitepapers, team credentials, reward structures, market demand, etc. Learn more about DeFi on trusted platforms like Gate before investing. Remember—TVL is just one dimension; prioritize security and rational decision-making.


