Morpho Vaults are curator-managed yield products built on top of Morpho Blue — a permissionless lending primitive that allows any party to create isolated lending markets with custom risk parameters. Depositors supply USDC into a vault managed by a professional risk shop (Gauntlet, Steakhouse Financial, Block Analitica, Re7 Labs, MEV Capital, or others), and the curator dynamically allocates capital across underlying Morpho markets to optimize yield within a defined risk envelope. The result is a 100-300 basis-point pickup over Aave V3 USDC, sourced from higher-utilization markets backed by blue-chip collateral like wstETH, cbBTC, and WBTC. Total Morpho Vaults TVL exceeded $5.8 billion in early 2026, making it the dominant vault category in DeFi.
Different curators target different points on the risk-yield curve. Steakhouse USDC concentrates exclusively in conservative blue-chip collateral markets and currently yields 4.5-6.5% APY with a 15% management fee. Gauntlet Prime sits in a similar conservative tier (4-6%), while Gauntlet Core adds select yield-bearing collateral like sUSDe for 5-8% yield. Gauntlet Frontier pushes into 8-12% territory by allocating into newer markets (syrupUSDC, PT-sUSDe) at the cost of narrower liquidity. Each vault publishes its full allocation, market exposure, and risk methodology in real-time. Live vault performance can be tracked at app.morpho.org/ethereum/earn.
- Material yield pickup over Aave: blue-chip Morpho vaults consistently deliver 100-300 bps more than Aave V3 USDC with comparable underlying collateral, simply by capturing the spread that Aave’s broader design leaves on the table.
- Professional risk curation: Gauntlet, Steakhouse, and other curators bring institutional-grade methodology (scenario testing, position sizing, monthly reporting) that retail depositors couldn’t replicate alone.
- Isolated market design: a bad debt event in one Morpho market is fully contained — depositors only have exposure to the markets their specific vault has opted into, not the entire protocol.
- Granular risk tiering: depositors can choose Prime (conservative), Core (balanced), or Frontier (yield-maximizing) tiers from the same curator, allowing portfolio-level diversification across the risk-yield curve.
- Full transparency: all vault allocations, collateral exposures, LTV caps, and underlying market parameters are published onchain in real-time — no opaque “trust-the-curator” black box.
- Curator fees compress headline APY: typical curator fees are 10-15% of yield, deducted before APY is shown to depositors — a 6% gross yield arrives as 5.1-5.4% net.
- Curator concentration risk: depositors implicitly trust the curator’s risk judgment; a curator who reaches for yield in the wrong market can expose the vault to bad debt that Aave-style broad design would have averaged out.
- Newer infrastructure: Morpho Blue and Vaults architecture is younger than Aave and has fewer market-stress test cycles behind it — though the October 2025 $775M Gauntlet vault supply event was a meaningful real-world validation.
- Yield variance by tier: Frontier-tier vaults can deliver 10%+ yields but also draw down faster when utilization compresses or a market gets removed for risk reasons — performance is meaningfully more volatile than Prime tier.
- Withdrawal subject to underlying liquidity: if vault allocations sit in high-utilization markets, large withdrawals may face delays until borrowers repay or the curator rebalances — this rarely matters at retail size but can bite institutional depositors.