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Blast

Blast doesn't have native staking. Liquid staking and DeFi alternatives further down still let you earn yield.

Native staking Not available

Blast uses Proof-of-Work — there is nothing to stake natively. See DeFi alternatives below.

Rollup maturity & risk

How Blast stacks up as a rollup

Stage 0 Other

Aggregated rollup-maturity rating + 5-axis risk rosette. Stage 2 is fully decentralised; Stage 1 has guardian intervention windows; Stage 0 still has admin keys. Sentiment colours come straight from the source.

Sequencer Failure

Self sequence

In the event of a sequencer failure, users can force transactions to be included in the project's chain by sending them to L1. There can be up to a 12h delay on this operation.

State Validation

None

Currently the system permits invalid state roots. More details in project overview.

Data Availability

Onchain

All of the data needed for proof construction is published on Ethereum L1.

Exit Window

None

There is no window for users to exit in case of an unwanted regular upgrade since contracts are instantly upgradable.

Proposer Failure

Cannot withdraw

Only the whitelisted proposers can publish state roots on L1, so in the event of failure the withdrawals are frozen.

Value secured

$100Million

7-day change

-3.12%

Earn yield · DeFi options

How to earn yield on ETH

Since Blast doesn't have native staking, the way to earn on ETH is through DeFi pools — either by lending it, providing liquidity, or wrapping it onto a chain that does support staking. DeFi adds smart-contract and (for LP) impermanent-loss risk.

15 pools

Apps on this chain · ranked by value held

What's running on Blast

Each protocol is a separate app. Lenders let you earn interest on what you deposit; DEXes let people swap tokens; liquid-staking apps give you a tradeable receipt for your staked coin. Tap any to see how to use it.

6 apps tracked

App Category Chains Best reward rate Value held on Blast Yield options
BA Baseline Protocol baseline-protocol Liquidity manager 1 $37.7Million
OV Overnight Finance overnight-finance Lending 2 $9.15Million
PA Pac Finance pac-finance Lending 1 $7.02Million
MA Mangrove mangrove Dexs 1 $4.25Million
TH Thruster V3 thruster-v3 Dexs 1 $4.17Million
TH Thruster V2 thruster-v2 Dexs 1 $2.16Million

Frequently asked

What people ask about Blast staking

What does staking ETH on Blast mean?

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Staking on Blast means locking your ETH with a validator that helps run the network. In return, the network pays you a share of newly created tokens — similar to how a savings account pays interest, but the rate is set by the protocol, not a bank.

How much can I earn?

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Right now the top validators on Blast pay varies by validator per year, after their commission. The rate moves with the chain's inflation schedule and how much of the supply is staked overall.

Is staking safe?

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Your tokens stay in your wallet — you never hand them over. The two real risks are slashing (the network can shrink your balance if your validator misbehaves, which is rare) and lock-up (you can't sell instantly during the unbonding period). Pick a validator with a track record and you sidestep most of the risk.

Can I unstake whenever I want?

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Yes, but unstaking is not instant. Most chains have an unbonding period of a few days to a few weeks during which you don't earn rewards and can't sell. Liquid-staking tokens (like stETH for Ethereum) sidestep this by giving you a tradeable receipt token.

What wallet do I need?

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Any non-custodial wallet that supports Blast works — Phantom or Solflare for Solana, Keplr for Cosmos chains, MetaMask for Ethereum and EVM chains, Yoroi or Eternl for Cardano. Connect, choose a validator, click delegate. The whole flow takes a couple of minutes.