The rise of Vault: Replacement of the DeFi “DIY”
Unless you’ve been living under a rock, it’s clear by now that DeFi has moved well past its experimental phase. The ecosystem has surpassed $100B threshold in TVL, supported by hundreds of active protocols, each playing a different economic role.
This level of maturity brings real benefits, but it has also created a practical problem. With so many protocols operating across multiple chains, actively managing yield positions now often means constantly monitoring different liquidation thresholds, reacting to governance changes, and adjusting strategies as market conditions shift. For many users and even institutions, this level of operational overhead has become a genuine pain in the ass.
In traditional finance, a similar problem was addressed decades ago. Back in 1976, Vanguard launched the first retail index fund, giving individual investors broad market exposure through a single, low-cost, rules-based product instead of forcing them to pick stocks themselves. With a similar goal of making sophisticated financial activity more accessible without constant hands-on management, we’re now seeing the rise of a new type of product built specifically for DeFi: the vault.
A DeFi vault is a smart contract that automatically manages crypto assets across multiple protocols based on predefined logic. These contracts don’t just execute transactions, they also contain decision-making frameworks. Once deployed, the vault monitors specific conditions and adjusts positions without requiring ongoing manual input.
When you deposit an asset (such as USDC or ETH), you receive a vault token that represents your share of the assets and any yield generated. The vault then deploys your capital according to its programmed strategy. As the strategy produces returns ,whether through lending, liquidity provision, or other methods, the value of your vault token increases over time.
Although they all operate on the same basic principle, different types of vaults are designed for different purposes and carry their own risk profiles. Here are the main categories currently active:
I’ll explore these categories in greater detail in a follow-up article.
Vaults offer clear advantages in convenience, but they also come with important limitations:
In short, vaults don’t eliminate risk. They make participation easier, but they still require users to evaluate the quality of the strategy and the parties managing it.
Before putting capital into any vault, consider asking these questions:
TL;DR: DeFi vaults package complex strategies into more accessible products, much like index funds did for traditional investing. This shift brings real benefits, but it also means users need to develop better skills in evaluating strategies and understanding risk.
If you’re exploring vaults or have questions about specific types and their risk profiles, feel free to ask in the comments, happy to dive deeper.
Why Smart Money Is Ditching Manual Yield Farming? was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


