Robinhood's 28 million funded customers can now lend stablecoins on-chain through Morpho, earning roughly 7% APY with Lloyd's insurance backing.
Morpho, a decentralized lending protocol on Ethereum, went live inside Robinhood's main app on July 1, offering eligible US users an estimated 7% APY on USDG deposits through a product called Robinhood Earn.
"Funds supplied through Robinhood Earn are deposited into a Morpho vault, then allocated across Morpho lending markets where borrowers post collateral from protocols including Spark, Ethena, and Maple," Johann Kerbrat, Robinhood's SVP and General Manager of Crypto and International, said on the Tokenized Podcast. The yield comes from borrower interest, not a Robinhood subsidy, he said.
The infrastructure is substantial. Morpho holds roughly $6.6 billion in total value locked across chains as of June 2026, according to DefiLlama. The first vault is curated by Steakhouse Financial and incorporates Maple Finance's syrupUSDG, an institutional credit product built on the Paxos-issued Global Dollar. Maple has originated more than $22 billion in institutional loans since 2022. Robinhood's platform holds $377 billion in client assets across 27.7 million funded accounts.
The integration marks the first time a decentralized lending protocol has been embedded as a core feature inside a major US brokerage app, bypassing the typical "crypto tab" ghetto. For context, the 7% yield is roughly triple what leading high-yield savings accounts offer. If even a fraction of Robinhood's user base deposits USDG into Morpho-powered vaults, the protocol could see a significant surge in total value locked, driving more lending activity and protocol revenue.
The mechanics are visible onchain. Users deposit USDG, a dollar-pegged stablecoin, into curated vaults managed by Steakhouse Financial. Those deposits generate yield funded by borrower interest on collateral supplied through partners including Spark, Ethena, and Maple. The borrowers are largely market makers and liquidity providers who need USDG to run spot and perpetuals trading — meaning a retail deposit effectively funds a professional trader's leverage, and the depositor collects the interest.
The entire system operates through noncustodial wallets, meaning Robinhood does not hold user funds during the lending process. Smart contracts enforce the rules, and users hold their own keys. For risk-conscious depositors, Lloyd's of London and RELM provide insurance coverage against cyber and smart contract exploits — one of the largest insurance programs ever built for a crypto product, according to Kerbrat.
Robinhood Chain goes live alongside Earn
The launch coincides with the public mainnet debut of Robinhood Chain, an Ethereum Layer 2 built on Arbitrum technology and designed specifically for financial applications. Morpho is positioned as foundational infrastructure on this new chain, allowing users to lend assets, borrow liquidity, automate profit-taking, and move funds between vaults — all within the Robinhood ecosystem.
Paul Frambot, co-founder of Morpho, said the partnership aims to deliver efficient and transparent on-chain yields. The subtext is clear: Morpho gets massive retail distribution, and Robinhood gets to offer competitive yields without building lending infrastructure from scratch.
Standard Chartered initiated coverage on Morpho on the same day as the Robinhood integration launch, signaling that on-chain lending infrastructure has graduated from crypto-native experimentation to institutional-grade financial plumbing. When one of the world's largest banking institutions starts writing research reports on a DeFi lending protocol, the "is this legitimate?" phase of the conversation is effectively over.
What this means for DeFi and TradFi
The competitive pressure this puts on other brokerages and fintech platforms is worth watching closely. If Robinhood can offer 7% yields on stablecoins while competitors are stuck at traditional savings rates, the incentive for platforms like Webull, SoFi, or even Charles Schwab to explore similar DeFi integrations increases dramatically. The race to embed on-chain yield products into retail interfaces may have just started in earnest.
There are risks to monitor. Smart contract vulnerabilities remain a persistent concern in DeFi lending, despite the Lloyd's insurance backstop. The 7% APY is also variable, not guaranteed, and depends on sustained borrower demand from partners like Spark, Ethena, and Maple. If borrowing demand contracts during a market downturn, yields will compress. Regulatory scrutiny is another wildcard — a major brokerage offering DeFi yields to retail customers will almost certainly attract attention from the SEC and state regulators.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.