Save in fiat, earn on-chain, bank-style simplicity with DeFi-powered yield.
Aave just launched a new iOS mobile app that looks and feels like a modern bank, while running entirely on DeFi infrastructure in the background. The app’s release was late 2025, and its aim is to mask most crypto complexity so the average Joe can take yield without touching Web3 tools like browser wallets, seed phrases or gas fees. Unlike your average “dump in jargon” DeFi dashboard, the Aave app behaves like a clean savings app, just like Revolut or Chime.
Users enroll with familiar onboarding flows, complete identity checks, link up bank accounts or cards, deposit fiat, and instantly see a clear balance in euros or dollars. What they don’t see is that the app automatically takes their deposits and converts them into stablecoins, which it then sends into Aave’s lending markets or similar strategies.
This allows users to earn higher yields that are tied to the demand for on-chain borrowing instead of to traditional banking rates, which often drop when central banks reduce interest. Historically, Aave’s yields have outpaced other instruments such as U.S. Treasuries, often hovering in the 5-9% APY range, and the app makes those returns available to users without requiring them to know much about DeFi mechanics. Regulation provides a huge enabler for this product.
Under Europe’s MiCA framework, Aave obtained a Virtual Asset Service Provider license, allowing it to operate in the EU legally, offer KYC onboarding compliant with EU law, and use banking rails such as SEPA for euro transfers. As a result, users across supporting regions can easily deposit or withdraw fiat without transferring funds through exchanges or purchasing stablecoins manually. The app provides up to $1 million in protocol level protection per user, a figure far higher than typical deposit insurance barriers people see with traditional systems. Because the insurance is not backed by the government, be it FDIC or EU deposit guarantee schemes, it is a protocol-native layer of safety that is financed from within the Aave ecosystem. While it’s not the equivalent of state-backed protection, it helps build user trust by demonstrating that the protocol has some responsibility for losses if unexpected.
The technology at the heart of making all the “crypto” disappear is account abstraction. Rather than leaving the private keys, gas fees and network selections in the hands of users, the app does all the managing. It produces wallets and manages them in the background, bundles transactions, pays gas, and utilizes the best network routes. It’s a user-friendly experience but they are interacting with, indeed, another standard, centralized fintech product…even though a savings engine is fully decentralized, fully transparent. When someone deposits money, the app converts fiat to stablecoins, places those into Aave’s lending pools and shows the user the simple fiat-denominated balance that updates as yield comes in. Aave’s own protocol is also renowned for robust record, a deep reserve of liquidity, numerous audits and sustainability through market cycles. It has thrived with little to no such vulnerability in its core contracts for years, relying on open source code, public governance and large-scale audits by top firms.