What Is the Difference Between Stablecoin Yield and Stablecoin Rewards?
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The distinction between stablecoin yield and stablecoin rewards is becoming one of the most important regulatory dividing lines in US crypto policy, and understanding it clearly matters for anyone holding stablecoins on a centralized platform. Stablecoin yield is a passive return paid simply for holding a stablecoin balance — no action required. The payer generates that return by putting underlying reserves to work through lending, Treasury holdings, or money-market instruments, then passes a share back to the holder. A flat 4% APY on a held USDC balance is the clearest example. Regulators and banking groups argue this structure is economically indistinguishable from interest paid on a bank savings account, which is why it has become the primary target of US stablecoin legislation.
Stablecoin rewards work differently. Instead of paying for holding a balance, these programs link payouts to specific platform activity — payments, transfers, card spend, trading volume, or loyalty usage. The closest traditional analogy is credit card cashback: the reward compensates usage, not idle funds. US financial rules have long treated merchant rebates and card rewards differently from interest payments for exactly this reason, and the proposed CLARITY Act framework applies the same logic to crypto. The regulatory question is not whether stablecoin rewards can exist — it is whether a particular reward structure genuinely compensates real activity or quietly functions as passive interest under a different label.