- Aave has deployed V3 on Monad, bringing lending, borrowing and its GHO stablecoin to the high-performance Ethereum-compatible blockchain.
- The launch gives Monad a core DeFi liquidity layer as it seeks to attract institutional and real-time financial applications.
Aave has deployed its V3 lending protocol on Monad, giving the high-performance Ethereum-compatible blockchain one of DeFi’s largest credit markets at launch.
The move brings lending, borrowing and Aave’s GHO stablecoin to Monad for the first time. It also positions Aave as a core liquidity layer for an ecosystem trying to attract institutional DeFi, fintech and real-time financial applications.
The deployment follows months of Aave governance discussion.
A February temperature check framed Monad as a network built for high-frequency DeFi, citing 400-millisecond block times, 800-millisecond finality and full Ethereum compatibility. A later May governance proposal advanced the deployment of Aave Protocol V3.7 on Monad and described Aave as a potential “core liquidity engine” for the chain.
Monad is a Layer-1 blockchain built to run Ethereum-style applications with higher throughput.
Its public mainnet launched on Nov. 24, 2025, according to Monad’s documentation. Aave Labs’ technical review said Monad targets 10,000 transactions per second with sub-second finality through optimistic parallel execution, decoupled consensus and execution, MonadBFT and a custom database layer called MonadDB.
That performance claim is central to the Aave deployment.
“The next generation of blockchain applications depends on fast execution and deep, reliable liquidity,” said Stani Kulechov, founder of Aave Labs. “Deploying on Monad extends Aave’s lending markets and GHO to a new high-performance ecosystem advancing the EVM, giving more users access to decentralized finance.”
The initial Aave market on Monad supports USDT0, USDC, GHO, USDe, mUSD, AUSD, WETH, cbBTC, wstETH, weETH, syrupUSDC and sUSDe.
Users can supply assets, borrow against collateral and access decentralized liquidity on the network. The governance proposal listed USDT0, USDC, GHO, USDe, mUSD and AUSD as borrowable assets, while USDT0, USDC, GHO, WETH and cbBTC were among assets enabled as collateral.
For Monad, the listing gives builders access to an established lending primitive.
For Aave, it extends a multichain strategy that has already taken V3 to networks including Celo, Sonic, Linea, Plasma and Ink. Aave’s documentation lists those deployments across 2025, showing how the protocol has used V3 to follow liquidity across Ethereum-compatible ecosystems.
The broader issue is whether new blockchains can attract useful liquidity, not just throughput claims.
Aave’s governance discussion said Monad Foundation would provide $15 million in incentives in the first 12 months after activation and acquire 10 million units of GHO to retain for more than six months. The Aave DAO also proposed 500,000 units of GHO incentives to support growth on Monad.
That matters because lending markets often become infrastructure for other applications.
A mature lending pool can support leverage, treasury management, stablecoin liquidity, collateralized borrowing and embedded credit products. Without deep liquidity, even technically fast chains can struggle to support financial applications beyond trading and incentives.
Keone Hon, co-founder and general manager of the Monad Foundation, said Aave’s arrival brings an institutional standard to the network.
“Aave is a lending standard that institutions trust and bringing it to Monad means that the Monad ecosystem now runs on the same liquidity primitives as Ethereum, at 10,000 TPS and 800ms finality,” Hon said. “Monad is built for institutional DeFi: the protocols that matter, running where performance actually clears, and extending the use cases unlocked by composability.”
The deployment also marks another step in GHO’s expansion beyond Ethereum mainnet.
Aave says GHO was initially available only on Ethereum but was designed as a multichain stablecoin. Its help documentation says expansion beyond Ethereum is intended to improve accessibility, lower transaction costs, improve user experience and deepen liquidity.
Chainlink is also part of the Monad setup.
Aave said Chainlink Price Feeds will secure price data, while cross-chain interoperability will be supported through Chainlink infrastructure. Monad joined Chainlink Scale in April 2025, a move that brought Chainlink Data Feeds, Data Streams and CCIP to the network’s developer ecosystem.
The Monad deployment also includes day-one support for Chainlink Smart Value Recapture, or SVR.
That is significant for protocol economics. LlamaRisk has described SVR as a way for Aave to recapture oracle extractable value that would otherwise go to MEV extractors, while also warning that the mechanism adds timing and synchronization risks during volatile liquidation events.
The deployment is not without caveats.
Aave Labs’ April technical assessment said Monad appeared technically viable for Aave V3.6 and found no hard technical blockers. But it also said Monad is a newer independent Layer-1 with a shorter production record than more established networks, and that its validator breadth, execution model and long-term operating characteristics still require scrutiny.
That makes the Aave launch an early test of Monad’s institutional DeFi pitch.
If liquidity grows, Monad could gain more than another application. It could get a base money market that other protocols, wallets and fintech-style products can build around.
The calculation is same for Aave.
The protocol already ranks among DeFi’s largest lending markets, with DefiLlama showing roughly $10.18 billion in active loans on Aave. The Monad deployment gives it a new venue for deposits, borrowing demand and GHO distribution at a time when lending protocols are competing to become the default credit layer across multiple chains.
The news value is therefore less about one more chain integration and more about market structure.
Monad is trying to prove that a faster EVM chain can host real financial activity. Aave is testing whether its lending markets and stablecoin can become default infrastructure wherever that activity moves next.
The above article “Aave Deploys V3 on Monad as High-Speed EVM Chain Seeks Core DeFi Liquidity” was first published on AlexaBlockchain. Read the complete article here: https://alexablockchain.com/aave-deploys-v3-on-monad/
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