Total value locked across decentralized finance protocols has crossed $100 billion for the first time since early February, according to DefiLlama data.
The figure currently sits at $100.089 billion, a recovery that comes after weeks of contraction that pulled TVL well below that threshold following the broader market weakness seen through late January and February 2026.
The chart tells the fuller story. DeFi TVL peaked near $175 billion during the 2022 bull market cycle before collapsing through 2023 as the bear market took hold. The recovery that began in 2024 carried TVL back above $120 billion through mid-2025 before a second wave of selling brought it down again. The current level of just above $100 billion represents a floor being tested and, for now, holding.
Three protocols account for the largest share of the current TVL figure. Lido, the dominant liquid staking platform, holds approximately $27.5 billion, making it the single largest contributor to total DeFi locked value. Aave, the leading decentralized lending protocol, sits at approximately $27 billion. EigenLayer, the restaking protocol that has grown rapidly since its launch, contributes around $13 billion. Together these three protocols represent roughly two thirds of the entire $100 billion figure, reflecting how concentrated DeFi value remains in a small number of established platforms.
Supporting metrics from DefiLlama show the broader ecosystem is active alongside the TVL recovery. Stablecoin market capitalization across DeFi stands at $316.5 billion, DEX trading volume over the past 24 hours reached $8.87 billion, and perpetuals volume came in at $28.4 billion. These numbers suggest capital is not just sitting locked in protocols but actively moving through the ecosystem.
Analysts point to several converging factors behind the TVL recovery. Yield-bearing asset strategies have expanded significantly, with new platforms aggregating what some are calling StableYield approaches that allow users to stack returns across multiple DeFi layers simultaneously. Institutional capital is also rotating more deliberately into smart contract ecosystems for utility-driven purposes, including staking and liquid staking rewards, rather than purely speculative positioning.
The Mantle Network has been a notable contributor to recent momentum, with its DeFi TVL crossing $1 billion while its stablecoin market cap approached $980 million. Ethereum-based smart contract activity also reached all-time highs this week in terms of daily active addresses and contract calls, providing the underlying network activity that DeFi protocols depend on for fee generation and user engagement.
The launch of Moody’s Token Integration Engine on March 18 adds an institutional infrastructure layer that could matter meaningfully for DeFi going forward. By bringing real-time credit ratings on-chain, the product addresses one of the structural barriers to larger capital allocations into tokenized DeFi strategies, particularly for entities operating under risk management frameworks that require standardized credit assessment.
The $100 billion level is psychologically significant but not structurally decisive on its own. What matters more is whether TVL can sustain above this threshold and begin building toward the $120 billion range that defined the upper end of the 2024 to 2025 recovery cycle.
For that to happen, the current drivers need to hold. Regulatory clarity from the SEC and CFTC guidance removes one category of risk that previously kept institutional capital cautious about DeFi exposure. If that translates into continued inflows into liquid staking and lending protocols over the coming weeks, the case for a sustained move higher becomes considerably stronger. For now, $100 billion is back on the board and holding.
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