Arbitrum vs Base for staking and DeFi
Base tops the live yield at around 25.78%; Arbitrum sits near 18.2%. The deeper question is fees, finality, and what apps you'll actually use.
Layer-2 on Ethereum — cheaper fees, same security model. Coinbase's Layer-2 — fast-growing, low-fee, Ethereum-compatible.
Side-by-side
Arbitrum and Base — chain spec sheet
| Arbitrum | Base | |
|---|---|---|
| Native coin | Eth | Eth |
| Value held | $2.7 B | $5.3 B |
| Live pools | 1372 | 2364 |
| Best yield | 18.20% | 25.78% |
| Apps deployed | 93 | 87 |
| Validators tracked | 2 | 2 |
Top yield options
Top live pools — Arbitrum vs Base
Arbitrum
Frequently asked
Arbitrum vs Base — common questions
Is Arbitrum or Base safer for staking? +
Bigger chains have more validators and more eyes on their consensus, which lowers slashing and downtime risk. They also have more audited DeFi, which lowers smart-contract risk. Smaller chains pay more — sometimes for good reasons (incentives), sometimes for bad ones (low liquidity).
Which chain pays more right now, Arbitrum or Base? +
Live data has Base on top at about 25.78%. The number itself is partly inflation: chains pay more by minting more tokens. Look at real yield (rate minus inflation) before chasing the headline.
Can I move my position from Arbitrum to Base? +
If you hold the same asset on both, a bridge moves it for a fee + gas. Native staking exits typically have a delay (ETH 1–3 days, SOL ~3 days, Cosmos chains often 21+). Plan the unstake before moving.
How do I choose between Arbitrum and Base? +
Start with where the apps and people you already trust live. Yield differences of 1–2% don't matter if you're not comfortable using the chain. Try a small position first — what you actually use beats what looks best on paper.