Maple Finance hits all-time high with $2B in active loans and $5B in assets under management

Maple Finance hits all-time high with $2B in active loans and $5B in assets under management

The onchain credit protocol is quietly becoming backend infrastructure for mainstream fintech, with Robinhood's new Earn product now running on Maple rails.

Maple Finance, the institutional-grade onchain lending protocol, has crossed two milestones simultaneously: $5B in assets under management and more than $2B in active loans. Both figures represent all-time highs for a protocol that has been steadily carving out its niche at the intersection of DeFi credit markets and traditional finance.

Robinhood’s credit backbone

Maple recently launched syrupUSDG on both the Robinhood Chain and Ethereum, enabling participation in Robinhood’s new Earn product. The asset uses USDG, a stablecoin issued by Paxos, as collateral.

Steakhouse Financial sanctioned syrupUSDG for use in Robinhood’s Earn vaults, placing Maple alongside other DeFi protocols like Spark and Ethena in the product’s backend infrastructure.

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The numbers behind the growth

The $5B AUM figure sits atop a foundation of sustained lending activity. Maple has originated more than $22B in cumulative loans since its launch in 2022, with historical interest paid to liquidity providers reaching into the hundreds of millions of dollars.

Active loans were reported at $2.4B as recently as April 2026. The protocol operates both permissioned and open lending pools, with the highest collateralization levels recorded at 127.8%.

From DeFi protocol to institutional credit layer

The SYRUP token sits at the center of this strategy. Maple is working to establish SYRUP as a reserve token within onchain credit markets.

The protocol has set a target of exceeding $100B in annual loan volume by 2030. That’s roughly a 50x increase from current levels. Maple has originated $22B in cumulative originations over four years while simultaneously landing a Robinhood integration.

What this means for investors

For anyone watching the SYRUP token, the key metric to track is whether AUM growth translates into sustainable protocol revenue. Active loans above $2B generating consistent interest payments create a fundamentally different value proposition than a token backed by speculative narrative alone. The 127.8% collateralization rate also provides a margin of safety that should, in theory, reduce the likelihood of the kind of bad debt events that cratered other lending protocols.

The competitive landscape is worth monitoring closely. Maple is not the only protocol eyeing institutional credit. Spark and Ethena are both present in Robinhood’s Earn vaults, and the broader onchain lending market includes established players like Aave and Morpho. The differentiator for Maple has been its focus on institutional-grade, permissioned pools alongside open access products.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

Maple Finance hits all-time high with $2B in active loans and $5B in assets under management

Maple Finance hits all-time high with $2B in active loans and $5B in assets under management

The onchain credit protocol is quietly becoming backend infrastructure for mainstream fintech, with Robinhood's new Earn product now running on Maple rails.

Maple Finance, the institutional-grade onchain lending protocol, has crossed two milestones simultaneously: $5B in assets under management and more than $2B in active loans. Both figures represent all-time highs for a protocol that has been steadily carving out its niche at the intersection of DeFi credit markets and traditional finance.

Robinhood’s credit backbone

Maple recently launched syrupUSDG on both the Robinhood Chain and Ethereum, enabling participation in Robinhood’s new Earn product. The asset uses USDG, a stablecoin issued by Paxos, as collateral.

Steakhouse Financial sanctioned syrupUSDG for use in Robinhood’s Earn vaults, placing Maple alongside other DeFi protocols like Spark and Ethena in the product’s backend infrastructure.

Advertisement

The numbers behind the growth

The $5B AUM figure sits atop a foundation of sustained lending activity. Maple has originated more than $22B in cumulative loans since its launch in 2022, with historical interest paid to liquidity providers reaching into the hundreds of millions of dollars.

Active loans were reported at $2.4B as recently as April 2026. The protocol operates both permissioned and open lending pools, with the highest collateralization levels recorded at 127.8%.

From DeFi protocol to institutional credit layer

The SYRUP token sits at the center of this strategy. Maple is working to establish SYRUP as a reserve token within onchain credit markets.

The protocol has set a target of exceeding $100B in annual loan volume by 2030. That’s roughly a 50x increase from current levels. Maple has originated $22B in cumulative originations over four years while simultaneously landing a Robinhood integration.

What this means for investors

For anyone watching the SYRUP token, the key metric to track is whether AUM growth translates into sustainable protocol revenue. Active loans above $2B generating consistent interest payments create a fundamentally different value proposition than a token backed by speculative narrative alone. The 127.8% collateralization rate also provides a margin of safety that should, in theory, reduce the likelihood of the kind of bad debt events that cratered other lending protocols.

The competitive landscape is worth monitoring closely. Maple is not the only protocol eyeing institutional credit. Spark and Ethena are both present in Robinhood’s Earn vaults, and the broader onchain lending market includes established players like Aave and Morpho. The differentiator for Maple has been its focus on institutional-grade, permissioned pools alongside open access products.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.