Aave V4 is moving toward Ethereum mainnet, but the useful signal is not a fast expansion cycle. It is a deliberately constrained redesign: governance has approved the off-chain ARFC, the binding on-chain AIP is next, and the first deployment is being framed around unified liquidity, tighter risk routing, and conservative caps rather than immediate breadth.
Snapshot approval moved V4 into its final gate
The Aave governance community approved the ARFC proposal in a Snapshot vote, clearing the off-chain stage for V4 activation on Ethereum mainnet. That does not deploy the protocol by itself. The binding step is the upcoming Aave Improvement Proposal vote, which will determine whether the launch proceeds on-chain and with which final parameter settings.
That distinction matters because V4 is easy to misread as either a routine version bump or a near-term full-scale rollout. The draft launch plan says otherwise: a narrow initial asset set, conservative supply and borrow caps, and delayed activation of some functions such as flash loans, even though their fee schedule is already set to match V3 at a 5 bps total premium.
Three Hubs change how liquidity and credit are organized
V4’s center of gravity is the new hub-and-spoke structure. Instead of treating the launch as another pool expansion, Aave is reorganizing liquidity into three Hubs with different risk mandates: Core as the default venue, Prime for more controlled collateral exposure, and Plus for strategy-oriented stablecoin activity. The point is not just cleaner product segmentation; it is to route liquidity and credit lines through separate lanes without fully fragmenting the system.
That design is where the strategic shift sits. A unified liquidity layer can improve capital efficiency compared with isolated pools, but only if risk can still be priced with enough granularity to avoid contaminating safer segments with more aggressive collateral or strategy demand. V4 addresses that with spoke-level configuration rather than one broad market setting. It is also why the launch is conservative on caps, especially for stablecoins: the DAO wants to see how liquidity routing and credit-line draws behave under real use before opening the system further.
| Hub | Role at launch | Main constraint or risk focus |
|---|---|---|
| Core | Default liquidity venue | Baseline market routing and system balance |
| Prime | Controlled collateral exposure | Tighter handling of collateral quality and credit extension |
| Plus | Strategy-driven stablecoin activity | Conservative draw caps while usage patterns are observed |
Dynamic risk pricing is the real upgrade, but it still has hard limits
Aave V4 adds a dynamic risk pricing engine that can adjust collateral factors and liquidation thresholds based on market conditions, reducing how often governance must intervene manually. That is materially different from treating risk settings as mostly static until a proposal changes them. It also fits the market structure problem Aave is trying to solve: unified liquidity only works if collateral risk can be repriced fast enough when conditions diverge across assets and strategies.
Even so, the system is not being launched as fully autonomous. Collateral risk premiums are still configured per spoke, and Aave has already carved out exceptions. The Lido and Bluechip spokes are set to zero collateral risk premium, specifically to preserve design integrity and gas efficiency. In practice, that means readers should not interpret “dynamic pricing” as unlimited parameter flexibility. Some parts of the architecture are intentionally fixed or simplified because the governance trade-off is not only safety, but also execution cost and clean market design.
Institutional-grade composability depends on how the first parameters land
One of the more practical additions is the ERC-4626 tokenization spoke design. Supply-only positions can be wrapped into transferable share tokens, which makes those positions easier to use across other protocols without requiring counterparties to understand Aave’s internal hub-and-spoke logic. That is the clearest institutional and infrastructure-facing element in the release: cleaner integration pathways, not just another lending market with more assets.
The same applies to the projected gas improvements. The draft points to up to 80% lower gas costs through unified liquidity and smart account features that can bundle multiple positions. If that estimate holds in production, it changes who can use the system economically and makes structured credit or treasury-style deployment more viable. But that capability is still downstream of launch settings. Conservative caps, phased feature activation, and unresolved discussions around liquidation cascades and fragmentation stress tests mean composability is available in principle before it is available at full scale in practice.
The next checkpoint is governance, not headline TVL
The immediate decision lens is straightforward. The next meaningful signal is the binding AIP vote and the finalized launch parameters attached to it, including exact asset configurations and initial caps. Those settings will say more about V4’s real deployment profile than generic launch headlines will.
Aave has already spent roughly 345 cumulative days on audits, formal verification, and a public security contest with a $1.5 million budget, which fits the same pattern as the rollout plan: more governance and risk discipline than speed. For traders, allocators, and protocol integrators, the right question is not whether V4 is live, but how tightly its first markets are bounded once it is. That is the difference between a modular redesign beginning to deploy and a mature liquidity layer actually opening up.

