Lido DAO (LDO)
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Overview
Lido DAO is a decentralized protocol that makes it simple to stake Ethereum and keep your assets liquid at the same time. Instead of locking 32 ETH and running your own validator, users deposit any amount of ETH and receive stETH (staked ETH), a token that tracks their stake and auto-updates with daily rewards. For apps that prefer fixed token balances, there’s also wstETH (wrapped stETH), a non‑rebasing version designed for broad DeFi compatibility. Together, these tokens sit at the center of the Lido DAO blockchain ecosystem on Ethereum and popular Layer 2 networks. The LDO token is Lido’s governance token: holders help steer upgrades, fees, and integrations. While the LDO price moves with market supply and demand, the token’s primary role is voting power in the DAO. (docs.lido.fi)
Lido does not run its own base chain; it operates smart contracts on Ethereum and extends to L2s via bridges. The protocol routes stake across multiple independent node operators and modules, aiming for resilience and decentralization while keeping staking accessible for everyday users. (docs.lido.fi)
Price, Market Position, and Liquidity
As of 11/11/2025 05:00 UTC, Lido DAO (LDO) trades at $0.883 with a +3.18% move over the last 24 hours.
The market capitalization stands at $785M, placing it at rank #131 by market value.
Daily trading volume is $121M. Lido DAO (LDO) has moved +17.00% over the past seven days and +6.24% across the last 30 days.
History & Team
Origins and launch
Lido DAO launched on December 18, 2020, as a community‑governed liquid staking protocol built primarily for Ethereum’s proof‑of‑stake era. The founding group is widely cited as Konstantin Lomashuk, Vasiliy Shapovalov, and Jordan Fish (aka “Cobie”). Lido’s operations are supported in part by DeFi‑focused entities, including a Cayman Islands company mentioned in research coverage, but governance and key parameters are set by LDO holders on-chain. (messari.io)
Backers and funding
In May 2021, Lido DAO executed a treasury diversification that raised $73 million, led by Paradigm with participation from firms such as Coinbase Ventures, Three Arrows, Jump Trading, Alameda Research, DCG, and others. In March 2022, Andreessen Horowitz (a16z) invested $70 million and used Lido to stake part of its ETH. In late 2024, Grayscale launched the Grayscale Lido DAO Trust, offering institutional exposure to LDO as a security via a private placement vehicle. These milestones helped seed integrations, broaden governance participation, and bring Lido to a wider audience. (research.lido.fi)
Strategic refocus
Over time, Lido pruned non‑core networks to concentrate on Ethereum. In October 2023, the DAO voted to sunset Lido on Solana. In 2024–2025, Lido on Polygon began sunsetting with a staged withdrawal timeline. These decisions reflect a strategy to focus resources on Ethereum and its L2 ecosystem, where stETH and wstETH see the deepest adoption. (blockworks.com)
Technology & How It Works
stETH and wstETH
When you stake ETH via Lido, you mint stETH at a 1:1 ratio. stETH is a rebasing ERC‑20: your balance adjusts daily as Lido’s oracle network reports validator rewards and penalties. For protocols that can’t handle rebasing, Lido provides wstETH, a wrapped form with a fixed balance that reflects rewards through an increasing exchange rate to stETH. Users can unwrap at any time. After Ethereum enabled withdrawals (Shapella), stETH can be redeemed for ETH directly through the protocol. (docs.lido.fi)
Fees, oracles, and mechanics
Lido applies a protocol fee on staking rewards, currently 10%, split 50/50 between node operators and the DAO treasury. Rewards and fee minting are accounted for in‑protocol via share mechanics. A set of independent oracles (with threshold consensus) reports balances to trigger daily rebases within capped limits for sanity checks. (docs.lido.fi)
Staking Router and modules
Lido V2 introduced the Staking Router, a modular architecture that allocates stake across different “modules.” The Curated Module is the original allow‑listed set of professional operators. The Simple DVT Module brings Distributed Validator Technology (DVT) from partners like Obol and SSV to diversify operators through multi‑party validator clusters. The Community Staking Module (CSM) opens the door for home and community stakers by using bonds and performance rules; in October 2024 it launched on mainnet, and by October 2025 the DAO expanded its share limit with a path to 10% of protocol stake. These modules broaden operator diversity and make participation more permissionless over time. (blog.lido.fi)
L2 reach
Because wstETH is non‑rebasing, it ports cleanly to Layer 2 networks. Lido provides official guidance and support for bridging to Optimism, Base, zkSync Era, and Scroll, among others, which enables staked ETH to flow into a wide range of on‑chain apps. (help.lido.fi)
Tokenomics & Utility
Lido DAO tokenomics at a glance
- Total LDO supply: 1,000,000,000 minted at launch.
- Initial allocation: DAO treasury 36.32%; investors 22.18%; initial developers 20%; founders and future employees 15%; validators and key signers 6.5%.
- Emissions: no fixed emission schedule from the treasury; changes occur via governance. (blog.lido.fi)
LDO is a pure governance token. Holders vote on protocol parameters such as fee rates, staking module share limits, node operator onboarding, incentive programs, and treasury actions. Routine matters often pass through the “Easy Track” optimistic governance flow, where motions execute unless ≥0.5% of total LDO objects within 72 hours. For higher‑impact changes, Snapshot signaling and on‑chain votes are used. In June 2025, the DAO approved a dual‑governance framework that gives stETH holders veto power over certain proposals via an escrow‑based dissent mechanism. This aligns stakers and token voters and adds an extra safeguard for core protocol changes. (docs.lido.fi)
Because LDO governs the protocol, factors that may influence long‑term LDO price include growth in stETH/wstETH adoption, DAO fee policies, the breadth of staking modules (e.g., CSM and DVT), and the health of the Lido treasury. None of these are fixed; they evolve by vote, which is why the LDO token’s primary utility is governance power. (blog.lido.fi)
Ecosystem & Use Cases
DeFi integrations
stETH and wstETH are widely used across DeFi. Historically, the stETH-ETH Curve pool has been a primary liquidity venue, with DAO incentives shifting after withdrawals made DEX liquidity less system‑critical. Today, wstETH serves as collateral, LP, and base asset across money markets, DEXs, and structured yield protocols, with integrations expanding on L2. (research.kaiko.com)
Lido offers guides for providing liquidity on Curve, wrapping to wstETH for compatibility, and bridging to networks like OP Mainnet, Base, zkSync Era, and Scroll. This “LSDeFi” stack lets users stake once and then put their staked ETH to work across lending, trading, and yield strategies—while continuing to accrue staking rewards under the hood. (help.lido.fi)
NFTs and gaming
With wstETH live on L2s that host active NFT and gaming ecosystems, builders can integrate yield‑bearing staked ETH into game economies, NFT marketplaces, or creator tools. This is not limited to DeFi; it extends to any app that benefits from a liquid, value‑accruing ERC‑20 on networks like Base and Optimism. Many projects are experimenting here, and official Lido bridging routes help ensure apps use canonical wstETH contracts. (help.lido.fi)
Beyond Ethereum mainnet
While Lido previously supported other proof‑of‑stake chains, the DAO chose to sunset Solana and later Polygon, consolidating around Ethereum and its scaling layers where stETH/wstETH have the strongest network effects. (blockworks.com)
Advantages & Challenges
What stands out
- Accessibility: stake any amount of ETH without running hardware or managing uptime. (docs.lido.fi)
- Liquidity: use stETH/wstETH across DeFi and L2s while earning staking rewards. (docs.lido.fi)
- Modular decentralization: Curated, Simple DVT, and Community Staking modules broaden the operator set and aim to reduce concentration over time. (blog.lido.fi)
- Active security posture: a long‑running Immunefi program offers up to $2,000,000 per critical finding, and special competitions have focused on the dual‑governance codebase. (immunefi.com)
Ongoing debates
- Market share and decentralization: As Lido grows, Ethereum researchers and community members continue to discuss the right balance between usability and validator distribution, a topic Lido’s module strategy is designed to address. (blog.lido.fi)
- Network scope: Sunsetting non‑Ethereum deployments suggests a tighter product focus but reduces multi‑chain optionality. (blockworks.com)
Where to Buy & Wallets
You can acquire LDO on well‑known centralized exchanges and decentralized exchanges on Ethereum. Major U.S. exchanges like Coinbase and global platforms like Kraken list the LDO token; on-chain, you’ll find LDO trading on DEXs such as Uniswap. Always verify you’re interacting with the official Ethereum contract: 0x5a98fcbEa516cF06857215779Fd812CA3beF1B32 (as noted in Lido’s docs). (coinbase.com)
For storage, any wallet that supports Ethereum ERC‑20 tokens will hold LDO and stETH/wstETH. Popular choices include browser wallets (e.g., MetaMask), mobile wallets, and hardware wallets for long‑term custody. If you plan to use wstETH on L2s like Base, OP Mainnet, zkSync Era, or Scroll, add those networks to your wallet and bridge using the official routes to ensure you receive canonical wstETH. (help.lido.fi)
Regulatory & Compliance
Lido DAO regulatory status
United States: As of October 2025, LDO has been the subject of private litigation in U.S. federal court. In the Samuels v. Lido DAO case, the court largely allowed claims to proceed past motions to dismiss, with debates centering on whether LDO is an unregistered security and whether the DAO functions as a general partnership. Separately, the SEC charged Consensys over its MetaMask Staking product, alleging unregistered offers of securities tied to liquid staking tokens (including Lido’s stETH). These matters are ongoing and highlight the evolving U.S. posture toward governance tokens and liquid staking. (dwt.com)
European Union: Under the EU’s Markets in Crypto‑assets Regulation (MiCA), tokens that are not stablecoins generally fall into the “other crypto‑assets” bucket (which includes governance tokens). MiCA fully applied from late 2024, with ESMA and the other European Supervisory Authorities publishing classification guidelines to harmonize treatment across the EU. LDO trading by EU‑authorized CASPs and public offers would follow those rules, while issuers and service providers must meet disclosure and authorization standards as defined by MiCA. (dlapiper.com)
Institutional access: In December 2024, Grayscale launched the Grayscale Lido DAO Trust, a private investment vehicle that offers accredited investors exposure to LDO as a security. This reflects a growing institutional framework around Lido exposure, separate from direct token custody. (globenewswire.com)
Lido DAO halal and shariah considerations
Is Lido DAO halal? Opinions differ among Islamic finance commentators. Some argue that proof‑of‑stake staking resembles sharing in network productivity rather than interest, and see staking as generally permissible when it avoids riba (interest) and prohibited sectors—making an “LDO shariah compliant” view possible in certain frameworks. Others contend that staking or liquid‑staking participation can resemble interest‑like returns or involve unacceptable uncertainty (gharar), and therefore do not view Lido DAO halal in all cases. Because views are not uniform, Muslim users often assess whether the underlying purpose—securing a PoS network—fits their interpretation of shariah principles. (techopedia.com)
Future Outlook
Lido’s roadmap centers on deeper decentralization and broader reach for staked ETH:
- Community Staking Module v2: The DAO has increased the protocol’s permissionless share limit, with a pathway to 10% by late 2025 or early 2026, plus new features like Identified Community Stakers (ICS), Entry Gates, and a strikes system for underperformance. This can bring many more solo and community stakers into the Lido core pool. (blog.lido.fi)
- More DVT in production: After multiple testnets and mainnet activation of the Simple DVT Module, expect continued growth of DVT clusters that spread validator duties across independent operators for resilience. (blog.lido.fi)
- L2 proliferation: Canonical wstETH is now on OP Mainnet, Base, zkSync Era, and Scroll, with expanding integrations across lending, DEXs, and structured products. As L2 ecosystems mature, “Lido DAO DeFi, NFTs, gaming” use cases should broaden as builders integrate yield‑bearing staked ETH into more app categories. (help.lido.fi)
- Governance evolution: Dual governance gives stETH holders veto powers on sensitive decisions, adding checks and balances to LDO voting. Expect the DAO to keep refining veto thresholds, timelocks, and emergency procedures as the protocol scales. (daotimes.com)
Summary
Lido DAO turned Ethereum staking into a liquid, composable building block for Web3. Its core idea is simple: stake ETH, receive a token you can still use. On the technical side, stETH and wstETH anchor a growing multichain footprint; on the governance side, the LDO token powers a mature process that now includes dual governance with stETH holders. The protocol’s focus on the Ethereum network, the shift toward permissionless community staking, and the push for DVT point to a future with broader operator diversity and deeper L2 integrations. For users comparing staking options, Lido’s combination of accessibility, liquidity, and active governance has made it a leading name in liquid staking—and a key reference point across the Lido DAO blockchain ecosystem. (docs.lido.fi)
Description
#131
Lido DAO is a decentralized organization that manages liquid staking protocols for Ethereum and other networks. It uses its governance token, LDO, to decide on key parameters and reward node operators and oracles.
| Sector: | Liquid Staking |
| Blockchain: | Ethereum |
Market Data
Tile coloring: Green indicates positive changes, red indicates negative changes, and neutral indicates no significant trend or unavailable data.
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Bybit (CEX) | 63K | 6.9K/6.8K |
Binance (CEX) | 60K | 4.5K/18K |
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Uniswap V3 (Arbitrum) | 39K | 1.2K/1.2K |
OKX (CEX) | 27K | 13K/15K |
KuCoin (CEX) | 15K | 1.5K/9.6K |
Uniswap V3 (Ethereum) | 6.3K | 2.8K/2.8K |
OKX (CEX) | 3K | 10K/11K |


