?

*Inflation figures shown here reflect circulating (market) inflation and may differ from a coin’s projected, policy (planned) inflation.

What is Ylds?

Ylds is a yield-focused cryptocurrency designed to reward and grow your holdings through staking, liquidity mining, and network rewards. Built on a scalable blockchain, Ylds delivers transparent token emissions that align incentives for holders, developers, and validators. With accessible yield opportunities and a governance-backed ecosystem, Ylds strives to enhance liquidity, security, and long-term value in the DeFi space.

Why does Ylds have inflation?

Ylds has inflation because new tokens are minted as rewards to validators, stakers, and liquidity providers to secure the network and fund ongoing development. This inflationary emission is intentional to sustain incentives, liquidity, and ecosystem growth, with the rate adjustable by protocol parameters.

How is Ylds inflation calculated?

Ylds inflation is calculated by comparing the circulating supply from one year ago to today’s supply. The percentage increase in supply over that period is the annual inflation rate. Learn more in our guide: What is cryptocurrency inflation?.

How is Ylds emission calculated?

Ylds emission refers to how new coins enter circulation, usually through mining or staking rewards. The emission rate depends on the project’s monetary policy and block reward schedule. Learn more in our guide: What is cryptocurrency emission?.

FAQ

We calculate our own inflation and emission data via our algorithms. You can learn more about how we derive our data in the learn page.

We encourage the usage of any data available on this website. You may use it for your personal or educational goals, but do not use it commercially unless you purchase the CryptoInflation API.

We strive to make the data as accurate as possible, but some blockchains have limitations on how precisely supply, inflation, and emission can be calculated. Moreover, the data on this website often has to be averaged and approximated, therefore the data can be a bit off sometimes.

Cryptocurrency emission and inflation aren’t inherently bad—they’re part of how many blockchains secure their networks and incentivize miners or validators. Moderate inflation can help distribute coins fairly and keep the network active, but excessive or poorly managed emission may dilute value and hurt long-term sustainability. You can learn more about how issuance affects price here.