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Glossary · crypto-backed

Maker Vault

crypto-backed Intermediate

Full Explanation +
01 · What is this?

How much do Maker Vault's Stability Fee and liquidation penalty actually cost users?

Stability Fee is the annualized cost of minting DAI through a Vault — similar to a 'loan interest rate.' In 2026, Stability Fees vary by collateral type: ETH-A Vaults typically range 3-8% annualized; WBTC Vaults may be slightly higher. Stability Fees accumulate inside the Vault and must be paid when repaying DAI and closing the Vault.

Liquidation penalty is the additional fee charged when liquidation triggers — typically 13% of collateral (ETH-A). Example: if you have $100 of ETH collateral and liquidation triggers, the system auctions your ETH to repay DAI debt and additionally deducts 13% as penalty. The existence of liquidation penalties gives users strong motivation to add collateral or repay when approaching the liquidation line.

Practical advice: Most experienced Vault users maintain collateral ratios at over 1.5x the liquidation threshold (e.g., if liquidation line is 150%, maintain above 225%), leaving buffer for price fluctuations.

02 · Why does it exist?

What is the fundamental difference between a Maker Vault and a traditional bank loan?

Both involve 'exchanging assets for liquidity,' but mechanisms are completely different. Traditional bank loan: requires credit review, identity verification, manual approval; assets can't be highly volatile crypto (banks typically won't accept ETH as collateral); loan terms decided unilaterally by the bank; default handling has legal process buffers.

Maker Vault: no identity needed, no credit review — any address holding ETH can immediately open a Vault; liquidation is automatically executed by smart contract with no 'call to negotiate' option; when collateral ratio is insufficient, liquidation happens within minutes (traditional loans might take months of legal process); no interest payment schedule — Stability Fee accumulates in the Vault until you actively repay. Vault is essentially 'permissionless lending,' at the cost of higher collateral ratio requirements and faster liquidation mechanisms.

03 · How does it affect your decisions?

What is the relationship between DAI Savings Rate (DSR) and Maker Vault?

DSR and Maker Vault are two different but interconnected mechanisms in the MakerDAO system. Vault is the DAI minting side — users mint DAI and pay Stability Fees. DSR (DAI Savings Rate) is the DAI holding yield side — users deposit DAI into the DSR contract to earn protocol-paid interest.

Fund flow logic: Stability Fees paid by Vault users → into MakerDAO protocol treasury → portion used to pay DSR to depositors. In other words, DSR's funding source is interest paid by Vault users. When MakerDAO wants to increase DAI circulation, it lowers Stability Fees (making minting cheaper) or raises DSR (attracting more people to hold DAI rather than sell). When DAI needs to contract, the opposite. The spread between DSR and Stability Fee reflects MakerDAO protocol's net income or subsidy.

04 · What should you do?

If ETH price crashes 40% quickly, what happens to users holding an ETH-A Vault?

This is the most important stress-test scenario for Vault users to understand. Assume: your Vault collateral ratio is 200% (you deposited $2,000 of ETH and minted $1,000 DAI). ETH-A liquidation threshold is 150%.

When ETH drops 40%: your collateral goes from $2,000 to $1,200. New collateral ratio = 1,200 / 1,000 = 120%, below the 150% liquidation threshold. → Vault immediately triggers liquidation: Keeper bots (on-chain arbitrage bots) begin auctioning your ETH collateral, purchasing at slightly below market price. The system deducts your $1,000 DAI debt + accumulated Stability Fee + 13% liquidation penalty from auction proceeds; remaining assets (if any) returned to you.

How to avoid: Two main methods — first, leave sufficient safety buffer when opening a Vault (collateral ratio 250%+); second, monitor ETH price and proactively add collateral or repay partial DAI to reduce debt when approaching danger zone. You can also use automation tools like DeFiSaver to set 'auto-add-collateral when ratio drops below X%' protection.

Real-World Example +

Practical Maker Vault Example

Mr. Lin holds 3 ETH (at $2,500 each, total $7,500) and needs $2,000 in liquidity but doesn't want to sell ETH. He deposits all 3 ETH as collateral in MakerDAO's ETH-A Vault, sets a 2,000 DAI borrowing limit, with a 375% collateral ratio — far above the 150% liquidation line.

Stability Fee 5% annualized: if held 12 months, he needs to repay 2,000 DAI principal + 100 DAI Stability Fee = 2,100 DAI to reclaim the collateral ETH. If ETH rises to $3,500, his 3 ETH is worth $10,500; after repaying 2,100 DAI he keeps ETH appreciation gains + retained $2,000 in liquidity.

What this means for your money: Vault lets you 'borrow without selling assets' — if you're long-term bullish on ETH, using a Vault to borrow stablecoins for spending is smarter than selling ETH. But the prerequisite is you can manage liquidation risk.

The Missing Link +
Direct Impact

Maker Vault's Core Trade-offs

✅ Benefits: retain ETH long position while gaining liquidity; decentralized, permissionless; interest rates transparent and governance-determined (not unilaterally adjusted)

❌ Costs: must overcollateralize (typically lock 2x+ ETH vs DAI borrowed); liquidation risk in sudden market drops; Stability Fee + liquidation penalty may make actual cost higher than expected

Missing Link: Vault's cost isn't just the Stability Fee — it also includes 'opportunity cost of locked capital.' The ETH locked in a Vault can't simultaneously be used for other DeFi strategies.

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