
What Is Staking: How to Earn Just by Holding Crypto
The first time I heard about staking, it sounded like magic: "just hold coins and earn interest, like a savings account." That's partly true. But the details matter — the same APY number can mean wildly different real returns and completely different risk profiles depending on the network.
How staking connects to Proof-of-Stake
On Proof-of-Stake networks — Ethereum, Solana, Cardano — blocks aren't confirmed by miners with graphics cards, but by validators who've locked up their own coins as collateral. That's staking: you commit coins to the network's consensus mechanism, and in exchange you get a share of new issuance and fees — much like miners get paid for computation under Proof-of-Work. The resource just changes: instead of buying electricity, the network is buying capital locked up as collateral.
What it actually pays
This is where the nuance kicks in. Ethereum's base yield in 2026 sits around 2.78% APR across roughly 897,000 active validators, and with MEV rewards a solo validator nets 3.3–4% all-in — but that's for someone running a full 32 ETH validator, per KuCoin. Solana's headline rate looks flashier — 6–8% APY — but with network inflation running around 5–6%, the real yield compresses to roughly 1–2%. Cardano flips the script: a modest 3–4% APY stays almost entirely real, since inflation is minimal and there's no lock-up or slashing at all, notes SpotedCrypto. The rule of thumb: never read an APY number without checking the network's inflation rate next to it — otherwise it's easy to mistake a flashy headline for actual income.
Three ways to actually stake
Solo validating is the fullest version: 32 ETH, your own node, full control and the full reward, but also full responsibility for uptime. Delegated staking is the Cardano and Solana model: coins stay in your own wallet, you just point them at a validator pool, with no minimum and no lock-up. Liquid staking means depositing coins into a protocol like Lido and getting back a token (like stETH) you can use across DeFi while the underlying coins keep earning. And exchange staking is the one-click option — the simplest by far, except the exchange holds the private keys, not you.
A 62-day queue, and other risks
As of May 2026, Ethereum's validator entry queue stretched to roughly 62 days, driven by a backlog above 3.5 million ETH, KuCoin reports. That's a good illustration of why staking isn't a savings account: getting in or out takes time, not a click. Other risks stack up too. Slashing is a penalty that burns part of a validator's staked coins for downtime or misbehavior. Centralization is real: the Lido protocol controls roughly 24–28% of all staked ETH — about 9.2 million coins — according to Datawallet — so if something goes wrong with the largest protocol, the whole market feels it. Then there's restaking through protocols like EigenLayer: it lets you reuse already-staked coins for extra yield, but it stacks new risk layers on top — slashing on Ethereum itself, plus slashing for every additional service your operator secures, Bitcoin Foundation explains.
The takeaway
Staking is a genuine way to earn yield on crypto without buying hardware, but it isn't a savings account with a guaranteed rate. Before staking anything, check three things: the real yield after subtracting network inflation, the entry and exit terms (is there a queue or unbonding period), and who actually holds the keys — you, a delegated pool, or an exchange. The flashier the headline APY, the more carefully the fine print deserves to be read.
This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.

Author
JonathanEditor
I love writing about cryptocurrency, am interested in general trends, and try to reflect this in my materials.
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