Aave reached multiple all-time highs this week, fueled by the heated crypto market.
The money market protocol reached $3 trillion in cumulative deposits on Aug. 15, while surpassing $29 billion in active loans on August 13, according to Token Terminal data.
Additionally, Aave’s total value locked (TVL) climbed to a record high above $40 billion on Aug. 14, based on DefiLlama data.
The achievements come amid DeFi lending emerging as the second-largest category with $75.3 billion in combined TVL.
Lending sector shows strong growth
DeFi lending protocols collectively manage $75.3 billion in total value locked across 540 protocols, making it the second-largest DeFi category behind liquid staking’s nearly $81 billion.
The lending sector has posted a strong recent performance with 18.7% growth over the past month, outpacing most other DeFi categories. Furthermore, active loans reached roughly $43 billion on August 13, a new record for the sector.
Within this landscape, Aave commands a dominant position with approximately 66.7% market share of the DeFi lending market. Aave’s nearest competitor, Morpho, holds just $6.3 billion in deposits. As a result, Aave is nearly six times larger.
The protocol’s TVL has grown 25.7% over the past 30 days, with active loans increasing by nearly $8 billion (38%) in the same period. This growth trajectory positions Aave among the top 41 US-chartered commercial banks by deposit volume, ahead of established institutions like Barclays.
Token performance and growth outlook
The AAVE token has surged 138% from its 2025 bottom on April 8. Aave founder Stani Kulechov projects the platform could reach $100 billion in net deposits before year-end, which would place it among the world’s 35 largest banks on par with Deutsche Bank.
The protocol’s expansion has been driven by institutional adoption and strategic partnerships.
Nasdaq-listed BTCS uses Aave to generate yield on Ethereum holdings, while $6.4 billion of Ethena’s USDe stablecoin and related assets are deposited on the platform.
Aave’s multiple records this week demonstrate the protocol’s evolution into a potential institutional-grade financial infrastructure, capturing market share as traditional finance institutions increasingly integrate decentralized lending services.