Crypto Staking Calculator

Estimate your staking rewards and portfolio growth. Enter the number of tokens, APY, duration, and token price to project your total rewards in both tokens and USD, including the effect of compounding.

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Understanding Crypto Staking

Crypto staking is the process of locking your cryptocurrency in a blockchain network to help validate transactions and secure the network. In exchange for participating in this validation process, you earn staking rewards � essentially interest on your crypto holdings. Staking is a core mechanism of Proof-of-Stake (PoS) blockchains, which have largely replaced energy-intensive Proof-of-Work mining for new blockchain projects.

When you stake your tokens, you are delegating them to a validator node that processes transactions and creates new blocks. The network rewards validators with newly minted tokens and transaction fees, which are distributed proportionally to all stakers. Typical staking yields range from 3% to 15% APY, depending on the network, total amount staked, and current network conditions.

The major appeal of staking is that it provides a way to earn passive income on crypto without selling your tokens. Rather than letting your crypto sit idle in a wallet, staking puts it to work earning returns � similar to earning interest in a savings account, but with much higher yields and correspondingly higher risks.

Popular Staking Cryptocurrencies and Their Yields

Different blockchain networks offer varying staking rewards. Here is a comprehensive comparison of the most popular staking options:

  • Ethereum (ETH): 3-4% APY. The largest PoS blockchain by market cap. Requires 32 ETH to run a validator solo, but liquid staking protocols (Lido, Rocket Pool) allow any amount. Very secure with the highest total value staked (~$40B+).
  • Solana (SOL): 6-8% APY. Fast, low-cost blockchain with a large validator network. Easy to stake through wallets like Phantom. Moderate risk with occasional network stability issues.
  • Cardano (ADA): 4-5% APY. Research-driven blockchain with no lock-up period for staking. You can unstake at any time. Popular for risk-averse stakers.
  • Polkadot (DOT): 10-14% APY. Higher yields but with a 28-day unbonding period. DOT also has relatively high inflation (~7-10%), so real returns after inflation are lower.
  • Cosmos (ATOM): 15-20% APY. High rewards but with a 21-day unbonding period and higher token inflation. ATOM's staking is essential to the interchain security model.
  • Avalanche (AVAX): 8-10% APY. 14-day lock-up period. Strong ecosystem with growing DeFi and NFT adoption.
  • Polygon (MATIC/POL): 4-6% APY. Delegated staking with no minimum. Popular Ethereum scaling solution.

Important note on yields: High APY does not necessarily mean high real returns. If a token's inflation rate is 10% and staking APY is 12%, your real return is only ~2%. Also, token price volatility can easily overshadow staking rewards � a 10% APY is meaningless if the token drops 50% in value.

Compounding: Daily vs. Monthly vs. None

Compounding frequency significantly impacts your total staking returns. Our calculator lets you compare three options:

  • Daily compounding: Rewards are reinvested every day. This produces the highest effective APY. At a 5% APR with daily compounding, the effective APY is approximately 5.13%. Over 5 years with 32 ETH, this extra ~0.13% compounds to give you about 0.3 ETH more than monthly compounding.
  • Monthly compounding: Rewards are reinvested once per month. The most practical option for most stakers. Slightly lower effective APY than daily but still significantly better than no compounding.
  • No compounding (simple): Rewards are earned but not reinvested. This is linear growth rather than exponential. Over long periods, this results in significantly fewer total rewards.

For a concrete comparison with 32 ETH at 5% APY over 5 years: Daily compounding yields ~8.84 ETH in rewards. Monthly yields ~8.78 ETH. No compounding yields 8.00 ETH. The compounding advantage grows significantly over longer time periods � at 10 years, the gap widens from 0.84 ETH to nearly 2 ETH in favor of daily compounding.

Staking Risks You Should Know

While staking is generally safer than trading or DeFi yield farming, it is not risk-free. Understanding these risks is essential for making informed decisions:

  • Price volatility risk: The biggest risk. If you stake 32 ETH worth $64,000 and ETH drops 50%, your holdings (including rewards) are worth $32,000 � rewards do not compensate for a major price decline. Diversify across chains and keep staking as part of a broader portfolio strategy.
  • Slashing risk: Validators can be penalized (slashed) for misbehavior like double-signing or extended downtime. Slashing can result in loss of staked tokens (0.5-100% depending on severity and network). Mitigate by choosing reputable validators with high uptime records.
  • Lock-up period risk: Many networks require an unbonding period (7-28 days typically). During this time, you cannot access or sell your tokens. If a major market crash occurs, you cannot exit your position during the unbonding period.
  • Smart contract risk: Liquid staking protocols (Lido, Rocket Pool) rely on smart contracts. While extensively audited, smart contract bugs can potentially lead to loss of funds. On-chain direct staking is generally safer.
  • Inflation dilution: If you do not stake but others do, your share of the network decreases due to inflation from new token issuance. This creates an implicit pressure to stake or face dilution.

For a deeper comparison between staking and other passive crypto income strategies, read our staking vs. lending guide. To understand the broader DeFi ecosystem, see our DeFi guide.

Liquid Staking: The Best of Both Worlds

Liquid staking has emerged as one of the most important innovations in cryptocurrency. It solves the fundamental trade-off between earning staking rewards and maintaining liquidity. When you liquid stake, you deposit tokens into a protocol and receive a liquid staking derivative (LSD) in return � a token that represents your staked position plus accruing rewards.

The main liquid staking protocols include Lido (stETH), which dominates with $15B+ in TVL; Rocket Pool (rETH), a more decentralized alternative; and Coinbase (cbETH) for institutional users. These derivative tokens can be used throughout DeFi � as collateral for loans on Aave, in liquidity pools on Uniswap, or to earn additional yield on Curve Finance. This creates a powerful stacking effect where you earn staking yield + DeFi yield simultaneously, though each additional layer adds smart contract risk.

Frequently Asked Questions

Staking is locking your cryptocurrency to help validate transactions on a Proof-of-Stake blockchain. In return, you earn rewards � typically 3-15% APY. It's a way to earn passive income on crypto holdings rather than letting them sit idle.
APR is simple interest without compounding. APY includes compound interest. At 5% APR with daily compounding, effective APY is ~5.13%. The difference grows with higher rates and longer time periods. Always compare APY for accurate yield comparison.
Generally safer than trading or DeFi farming, but not risk-free. Main risks: token price volatility (biggest risk), slashing penalties, lock-up periods, and smart contract bugs for liquid staking protocols. Choose reputable validators with high uptime.
Ethereum (3-4% APY, safest), Solana (6-8%), Cardano (4-5%, no lock-up), Polkadot (10-14%, 28-day unbond), Cosmos (15-20%, 21-day unbond). Higher APY usually means higher risk and volatility. Diversify across multiple chains.
Liquid staking lets you stake while receiving a tradeable derivative token (like stETH). This solves the liquidity problem � you earn staking rewards AND can still use your tokens in DeFi for lending, trading, or as collateral. Leading protocols include Lido and Rocket Pool.