What is a Stablecoin? (Beginner's Guide)

Discover how stablecoins simplify global payments, and make digital finance more secure and accessible for everyone.
Nov 26, 20259 min read
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Money is constantly evolving. While cash and online bank accounts remain the primary tools for transactions today, this may not be the case for long. A new form of digital money has emerged, one that moves faster, works globally, and operates without inefficiencies endemic across the legacy financial system.

Stablecoins are digital assets designed to maintain a stable value, usually pegged to the U.S. dollar, gold, or another traditional asset. Given how useful stablecoins are, they now move trillions of dollars each month and facilitate more daily transaction volume than Visa and Mastercard.

This article unpacks how stablecoins are reshaping modern finance, what the different types are, and where the asset class is headed next.

Redefining How Money Moves

Stablecoins combine the reliability of fiat currency with the efficiency of blockchain technology, making them essential to the growing digital economy. That’s why leading institutions like PayPal, Bank of America, and JPMorgan are developing new stablecoin solutions, even as the world’s first and largest stablecoin, Tether’s USD₮, continues to dominate.

The extent of this adoption is evident in the numbers. By the end of 2024, stablecoins were involved in over two-thirds of all onchain transactions and the total stablecoin supply across all major projects now exceeds $297B as of 20th November 2025.

Beyond serving as a liquidity source in crypto-native markets, stablecoins also act as a global dollar liquidity pool, enabling:

  • Efficient trading and settlements: Traders and investors use stablecoins as a safe intermediary when moving between assets.

  • Borderless payments: Stablecoins allow users to send and receive money globally, often with lower fees and faster settlement times than traditional banking rails.

  • Protection against inflation: In emerging markets and unstable economies, stablecoins provide a dollar-pegged alternative to weak local currencies.

However, not all stablecoins function the same way. They differ in their mechanisms for maintaining stability, collateralization methods, and degree of decentralization.

The Six Main Categories of Stablecoins

Stablecoins share the goal of maintaining a stable value, but the methods vary widely. Some rely on traditional financial reserves, while others use crypto collateral, algorithmic mechanisms, or yield-generating assets. These structural differences affect everything from stability and capital efficiency to regulatory scrutiny and adoption.

Fiat-Backed Stablecoins

Fiat-backed stablecoins are the most widely adopted type of stablecoin. These assets are designed to maintain a 1:1 peg with traditional currencies, such as the U.S. dollar or euro. They achieve this peg through direct fiat reserves and market arbitrage. If the price falls below $1, traders buy the stablecoin at a discount and redeem it for $1 in cash through whitelisted entities. This reduces the token supply and restores the peg.

If the price rises above $1, traders mint new stablecoins with $1 of fiat and sell them at a premium, increasing supply and rebalancing the price. This continuous backing by fiat assets ensures reliability and scalability.

These stablecoins are issued by companies that maintain reserves in banks, cash equivalents, Treasury bills, or government securities. For example, Tether’s USD₮, the world's largest stablecoin, is backed by a mix of cash, U.S. Treasury bills, and other secure, liquid assets. This ensures redemption demands can be met at all times.

Crypto-Backed Stablecoins

Crypto-backed stablecoins use cryptocurrency as collateral instead of fiat. Due to volatility, these must be over-collateralized. For every $1 issued, more than $1 worth of crypto is locked up to ensure backing even during price drops.

The most well-known example is DAI, issued by MakerDAO. Users deposit collateral (like ETH or wBTC) into a Maker Vault. To generate $1,000 of DAI, one might need to lock up $1,500 of ETH. If collateral falls too much in value, the system automatically liquidates some to maintain solvency.

These stablecoins are more decentralized and transparent, with verifiable onchain reserves. But their reliance on volatile assets makes them less capital-efficient, and sharp market downturns can trigger cascading liquidations.

While successful, crypto-backed stablecoins like DAI often depend partly on centralized stablecoins (like USDC), raising questions about their true decentralization and scalability.

Commodity-backed Stablecoins

Commodity-backed stablecoins are backed by physical assets like gold, silver, or other real-world commodities. These stablecoins can be useful for users seeking long-term value preservation and protection against inflation. 

The most prominent example of a commodity-backed stablecoin is Tether Gold (XAUt), which represents ownership of physical gold held in Swiss vaults. Each XAUt token corresponds to one troy ounce of gold, and can be transferred and used digitally as well as physically redeemed.

Commodity-backed stablecoins and other tokenized real-world assets create digital representations of physical value that can be moved and used onchain. As more commodities are ported onchain, these assets will be increasingly useful for everything from wealth preservation to decentralized lending and borrowing.

Algorithmic Stablecoins

Algorithmic stablecoins aim for price stability through automated supply and demand mechanisms, without collateral. They use economic incentives to keep prices stable.

A common design involves a dual-token system. One token acts as the stablecoin; the other absorbs volatility. TerraUSD (UST) was the most well-known example. When UST dropped below $1, it could be burned in exchange for LUNA, reducing supply. If UST exceeded $1, LUNA could be burned to mint new UST.

This system worked until it didn’t. When UST lost its peg, confidence in LUNA collapsed, triggering mass sell-offs and hyperinflation. LUNA and UST had market caps of ~$40B and ~$18B respectively before crashing, marking one of crypto’s most dramatic failures.

Other algorithmic models, like rebase tokens or coupon-based systems, have also struggled. Since Terra’s collapse, purely algorithmic models have fallen out of favor because of hybrid or collateralized approaches.

Hybrid Stablecoins

Hybrid stablecoins combine features of collateralized and algorithmic models. Using partial reserves and algorithmic stabilization, they aim for capital efficiency and resilience.

These often employ fractional collateralization, with only part of the supply backed by real assets. The rest relies on a mechanism (like a secondary token) to maintain the peg.

Frax (FRAX) is a prominent example. It launched as a fractional-algorithmic stablecoin, backed partly by collateral and partly by an algorithm. However, Frax has since transitioned to full collateralization to improve stability.

While theoretically sound, hybrid stablecoins rely heavily on market confidence. If trust in their mechanism or secondary token weakens, the peg can break. This makes them less proven at scale compared to fiat- or crypto-backed options.

Yield-Bearing Stablecoins

Yield-bearing stablecoins offer a balance of stability and passive income by distributing earnings from staking, arbitrage, or tokenized real-world assets. Two notable examples are Ethena’s USDe and Ondo’s USDY.

Ethena’s USDe is collateralized by staked assets like ETH. It uses a delta-neutral strategy, combining ETH staking with short positions in derivative markets. This neutralizes price exposure while generating yield, creating a synthetic dollar without direct fiat backing. Ondo’s USDY, by contrast, is backed by U.S. Treasuries and distributes daily yield based on those returns.

These stablecoins are appealing for passive income, but carry new risks: derivative exposure, counterparty issues, and regulatory uncertainty regarding tokenized securities.

Which Stablecoin is the Best?

There’s no universal answer. But as of 2025, Tether’s USD₮ remains the most dominant and widely used:

  • Market dominance: $150B+ market cap (~65% of dollar-backed supply) as of September 2025

  • Liquidity: Most used trading pair across exchanges

  • Resilience: Has weathered multiple crises, including USDC’s temporary depeg in 2023

  • Multi-chain presence: Available on Ethereum, Tron, Solana, Polygon, BSC, and more

  • Global usage: Especially in emerging markets, for remittances and savings

Still, the “best” stablecoin is evolving. What matters more is where the category is headed.

The Future of Stablecoins

Stablecoins have already shifted from a niche crypto tool to core infrastructure for moving value online, and that momentum is unlikely to slow.

As networks get faster and cheaper, and as regulations clarify how reserves, disclosures, and consumer protection should work, using stablecoins will start to feel closer to using regular money, just with global reach and 24/7 settlement.

In the long run, the most widely used stablecoins are likely to be those that combine market trust with infrastructure that offers reasonable speed, security, and scalability.

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