USDD’s first year under its 2.0 design traces a broader change in how digital dollars are being built, verified and put to work across DeFi.
Stablecoins were designed to be invisible infrastructure, sitting quietly in the background, enabling trading, payments and arbitrage without becoming products in their own right. Over the past two years, however, that assumption has changed.
As scrutiny shifts to how digital dollars are built, transparency, user control and verifiable backing have moved to the center of the conversation.
One year after a major protocol overhaul, USDD, a decentralized stablecoin pegged to the USD through crypto reserves, offers a clear illustration of this transition in practice.
Designing a fully on-chain stablecoin
Until early 2025, USDD operated under what is now known as USDDOLD, an algorithmic framework issued and managed by the TRON DAO Reserve. That structure was replaced by USDD 2.0, a shift that redefined the stablecoin’s operating logic. The new version is overcollateralized and fully on-chain. Users can mint USDD directly, while the token itself remains immutable and non-freezable. Every dollar of collateral is visible on-chain, so anyone can check reserves and risk parameters in real time.
Equally important was the move toward economic self-sufficiency. Where the original version relied on TRON DAO subsidies, USDD 2.0 introduced the Smart Allocator mechanism, enabling the protocol to generate its own yield and gradually remove the need for external financial support. It does so by deploying reserves into a set of market-neutral DeFi strategies and routing the resulting returns back through USDD Earn. To date, the system has generated more than $8 million in yield for the protocol.
What a year of growth looks like in practice
Since the upgrade a year ago, USDD’s total value locked (TVL) has grown to a peak of $1.4 billion as of January 2026, reflecting steady inflows rather than short-term speculation. About $650 million now sits on TRON, with roughly $340 million on Ethereum and around $7 million on BNB Chain.
The expansion into Ethereum and BNB Chain, though, signals a real change in how the system is put together. USDD is no longer tied to a single ecosystem. It now spans multiple chains, moving beyond its TRON roots into Ethereum’s deeper liquidity pools and onto BNB Chain.
In its 2025 “USDD 2.0 – New Horizons” report, Messari notes that USDD’s total reserve collateral stayed above its circulating supply throughout the year. At its peak, collateral value climbed beyond $620 million, a trend the firm sees as strengthening the protocol’s ability to absorb risk.
Messari describes USDD as part of a move that mirrors what many DeFi builders now want: stablecoins that are both heavily collateralized and able to earn on-chain yield. The report draws attention to USDD’s Peg Stability Module, which enables 1:1 swaps with major stablecoins like USDT and USDC and helps keep the price anchored through flexible liquidity, rather than the rigid setups many older stablecoins rely on.
The researchers also note that reserve assets have been growing faster than circulation, a pattern they read as evidence that USDD is starting to match market demand for both stability and capital efficiency across DeFi.
sUSDD and the protocol’s multi-chain expansion
A key component of USDD’s evolution has been the introduction of sUSDD, which allowed the protocol’s yield model to move beyond TRON into Ethereum and BNB Chain. Built on the ERC-4626 tokenized vault standard, sUSDD is minted when users deposit and stake USDD into USDD Earn.
Messari notes that launching natively on Ethereum was a strategic leap, giving the protocol access to deeper liquidity and a broader set of DeFi applications than it could reach from TRON alone.
Put simply, sUSDD lets users grow their holdings passively while keeping full control of their assets on-chain. By the end of 2025, it had accumulated more than $296 million in TVL, delivered an average annual yield of about 12 percent, and attracted over 459,000 wallet addresses.
Positioning USDD in the stablecoin market
Although Tether (USDT) remains the backbone of crypto liquidity, its role is largely limited to settlement and transfers. USDD is trying to expand that role. By pairing price stability with on-chain yield tools such as USDD Earn, liquidity pools and the sUSDD vault, the project is positioning itself as a version of a dollar stablecoin that does more than just settle transactions.
That approach opens up different ways to use the same asset. Some holders treat USDD as a simple savings layer through USDD Earn, while others take a more hands-on route, placing liquidity on platforms such as Uniswap or PancakeSwap to adjust returns around their own risk preferences.
$1 billion TVL is only the beginning
With USDD approaching the $1.4 billion TVL mark, the team has been careful to stress that the figure is only the beginning, not the end goal. Plans include more DeFi integrations and new strategies to make capital more efficient across multiple chains. There will also be closer partnerships with wallets, exchanges, and other infrastructure providers.
The roadmap also puts more emphasis on community efforts, like education and outreach led by creators, to help growth come from regular users instead of short-term incentive programs.
Seen through the lens of its Outlook 2026, USDD appears to be moving away from chasing near-term milestones. The focus is shifting toward the quieter task of making yield-earning stablecoins part of how people actually lend, swap, and save in DeFi each day. Whether that shift will turn USDD from a fast-growing protocol into a lasting fixture of the stablecoin market will likely be one of the main questions investors and builders are watching.