Earn & vote

VVS staking and xVVS governance

Staking is where holding VVS turns into a stake in the protocol itself. Lock VVS, receive xVVS, and you step into two roles at once: an earner with a claim on protocol revenue, and a voter with a say in what VVS does next. Here's how the mechanism fits together.

From VVS to xVVS

The core move is simple: you stake VVS and receive xVVS, a yield-bearing governance token. xVVS represents your committed position. While VVS is the reward token you earn from farming or hold from a swap, xVVS is what you become when you put that VVS to work governing and supporting the protocol. The two are linked but distinct — see the side-by-side comparison on the VVS token page.

The revenue loop

A share of the fees the exchange generates is directed to buy VVS back from the open market, and that bought-back VVS flows to xVVS holders as yield. The logic is a feedback loop: more trading volume means more fees, more buybacks, and more reward for the people staking long-term. It also ties the token's incentives to real platform usage rather than to emissions alone. As with every figure on this site, the exact share and current yield change over time — confirm them live rather than trusting a static number.

The xVVS revenue loop A cycle: trading generates fees, a portion of fees buys back VVS from the market, the bought-back VVS is distributed to xVVS holders as yield, which encourages more staking and supports the platform. Trading fees Buy backVVS RewardxVVS holders more staking · deeper support for the platform
Fees fund buybacks; buybacks reward stakers; rewards encourage staking. The loop links xVVS yield to actual trading activity.

Locking and voting power

Governance on VVS is weighted toward commitment. Your voting power is tied to your xVVS, and crucially, the longer you lock, the more weight your vote carries — longer locks earn disproportionately higher voting power. The reasoning is straightforward: people willing to commit for the long haul have their interests aligned with the protocol's long-term health, so their voice counts for more than that of someone who can exit tomorrow.

In practice this means governance participation is a spectrum. You can hold xVVS for the yield alone, or lock it to take an active hand in proposals — direction of emissions, new features, parameter changes and the like. The model has been rolled out in stages as the protocol matured; the specifics of what's votable at any moment are best read from current official documentation.

Staking is a commitment, not a savings account

Locking xVVS for extra voting power means you can't freely move it until the lock ends. Weigh the yield and influence against giving up liquidity for that period, and never stake funds you might need at short notice.

How the pieces connect

The path from earning to governing.
StepWhat you doWhat you get
1Farm or acquire VVSVVS in your wallet
2Stake VVSxVVS — yield-bearing, vote-carrying
3Hold xVVSA share of buyback-funded revenue
4Lock xVVS longerGreater voting power on proposals

Things to keep in mind

Staking is the bridge between using VVS and shaping it. If you haven't yet, read how the VVS token is structured, and weigh the risks before committing tokens for a lock period.