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So I keep seeing people get confused about APR versus APY in crypto, and honestly, it's one of those things that seems simple but catches a lot of people off guard when they're comparing yields.
Let me break it down real quick. APR in crypto is basically your base rate—it's simple interest. You put in 10k at 20% APR, you make 2k that year. Next year, same 2k. Straightforward math, no compounding involved. That's it.
APY is where it gets interesting. This is where compounding kicks in. You're earning interest on your interest. Same 20% APR, but if it compounds monthly? You're looking at closer to 21.94% APY by year end. Daily compounding pushes it even higher, around 22.13%. The difference might seem small, but over time it stacks.
Here's the thing though—when you're comparing platforms, some show APR and others show APY. A lot of people don't realize they're looking at different metrics entirely. You can't just compare a 20% APY product against a 20% APR product and assume they're equal. They're not. That APY number already includes compounding magic, while APR doesn't.
In crypto specifically, there's another layer. Most staking platforms and yield farms quote APY in tokens, not dollars. Sounds good until the token price tanks and your "high yield" position is actually underwater in fiat value. I've seen people get burned by this—they earned a ton of tokens but lost money overall because the price moved against them.
Before you lock up your assets anywhere, check three things: Is it APR or APY? How often does it compound? And are the returns in tokens or stablecoins? This matters way more than most people think. APR in crypto can look amazing on paper, but you need to know what you're actually getting paid in and how frequently.
I usually do a quick conversion to make sure I'm comparing apples to apples. Takes two minutes and saves a lot of regret. Worth doing every time you're evaluating a new protocol or staking option on Gate or anywhere else.