Key takeaways

  • Staking is the process of locking up cryptocurrency to help secure a proof-of-stake blockchain in exchange for rewards.
  • Think of it like a high-yield savings account — except instead of a bank paying you interest, the blockchain protocol pays you for participating in consensus.
  • Common staking yields range 3-8% annually for major networks (ETH, SOL, ATOM). Higher yields exist but typically come with higher risk.
  • Four main ways to stake: solo, pool, exchange, liquid staking. Each has different trade-offs in custody, complexity, and capital efficiency.
  • Educational only. Staking has real risks: slashing, validator failure, lock-up periods, and tax obligations on rewards.

What is staking?

Staking is the act of committing your cryptocurrency to help operate a proof-of-stake (PoS) blockchain. In exchange, the protocol pays you newly issued tokens as a reward.

Why does the protocol pay you? Because by staking, you’re helping secure the network. PoS blockchains rely on stakers to validate transactions and prevent fraud. The more value staked, the more expensive an attack becomes.

It’s the modern alternative to “mining” (proof-of-work, what Bitcoin uses). Staking achieves the same security goal — making it expensive to attack the network — but with vastly less energy.

How does staking actually work?

The mechanics in plain English:

1. You commit (stake) tokens

You lock up a specific amount of the network’s native token. For Ethereum, that’s ETH. For Solana, SOL. For Cosmos, ATOM. The minimum and lock-up rules vary by network.

2. A validator uses your stake to participate in consensus

Validators are computers running the blockchain’s software. They propose new blocks, verify transactions, and earn rewards. Your stake either runs your own validator (advanced) or backs someone else’s (delegated staking).

3. The protocol pays rewards from new issuance + transaction fees

The blockchain mints new tokens and distributes them to active stakers. The annual yield depends on the protocol’s issuance schedule, the percentage of total supply staked, and validator performance.

4. You can unstake (eventually)

Most networks have an “unbonding” period — a delay between requesting to unstake and getting your tokens back. Ethereum’s is variable but typically days. Cosmos and Solana are typically days too. This is a feature, not a bug — it prevents instant exits during attacks.

4 ways to stake

1. Solo staking (run your own validator)

Highest reward, most control, most complexity. For Ethereum you need 32 ETH and the technical chops to run validator software 24/7. For most operators, the operational headache isn’t worth the marginal yield improvement.

2. Staking pools

Pool many users’ stakes together. The pool runs validators on behalf of everyone and distributes rewards proportionally. Lido, Rocket Pool (ETH); Marinade (SOL); Lido on multiple chains. Lower minimums, no infrastructure burden.

3. Exchange staking

Coinbase, Kraken, Binance offer staking-as-a-service. You hit a button, they handle the rest. Easiest path. The trade-off: they custody your tokens (counterparty risk) and take a cut of rewards (typically 25-35%).

4. Liquid staking

The newest and most capital-efficient option. You stake ETH, get a token like stETH (Lido) or rETH (Rocket Pool) in return that represents your staked position. The receipt token is liquid — you can use it as collateral, trade it, or DeFi with it — while the underlying ETH keeps earning staking rewards. Two yields from one position.

Staking rewards: what to actually expect

Important: these are paid in the native token. If the token drops 30%, your stake value drops 30% even if you’re earning 8% in token terms. Yield ≠ return.

What are the risks?

Slashing

If your validator misbehaves (double-signs, goes offline for too long), the protocol can confiscate part of your stake. With reputable pools, slashing is rare and usually capped. With self-running validators, it’s your responsibility.

Lock-up risk

Your tokens may be illiquid for days or weeks during unbonding. If the market crashes 20% during your unbonding period, you can’t exit fast.

Smart-contract risk (for liquid staking)

Liquid staking protocols (Lido, Rocket Pool) are smart contracts that can have bugs. Major ones are heavily audited but not bug-proof.

Tax risk

Staking rewards are generally taxable as ordinary income at fair market value when received. Track every reward. This is unlike capital gains — it hits you on receipt, not on sale.

Top courses for learning staking properly

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Frequently asked questions

Is staking taxable?
In the US, yes. Staking rewards are generally treated as ordinary income at fair market value when received. Track every reward. Always work with a qualified CPA.
What is the safest way to stake?
For small amounts, exchange staking (Coinbase, Kraken) is operationally safest. For larger amounts, liquid-staking pools (Lido, Rocket Pool) offer better capital efficiency with manageable smart-contract risk. For institutional positions, dedicated validators with reputable operators (Figment, Kiln, Allnodes).
Can I lose money staking?
Yes. Three ways: token price drops while you’re staked, slashing penalties from validator misbehavior, and smart-contract bugs in liquid-staking protocols. None of these are common with reputable setups, but all are possible.
What is liquid staking?
Liquid staking issues a token (e.g., stETH, rETH) representing your staked position. You can use this token as collateral or trade it while the underlying continues earning. It’s the same staking with added capital efficiency.
How much do I need to start staking?
Through pools or exchanges, anywhere from $1 to no minimum on most networks. Solo Ethereum staking requires 32 ETH (~$100K+). Solo Solana, Cosmos, and most other networks have lower or no minimums.

Educational content only. Not investment, tax, or legal advice. ARC Educational LLC is not a broker, dealer, exchange, custodian, or investment adviser. Always work with qualified, licensed professionals. See our disclaimers.