Understanding Aerodrome's Role in the Base L2 Ecosystem

Aerodrome settles most of Base's DEX trading volume but trails Uniswap by TVL. A look at the numbers behind the layer-2's busiest onchain venue.
Crypto Rich
July 3, 2026
Table of Contents
Aerodrome (@AerodromeFi) is the main decentralized exchange and liquidity hub on Base, Coinbase's layer-2 network, and it settles most of the chain's trading volume even though it is not the largest protocol on Base by total value locked. That split, heavy volume paired with mid-tier TVL, is the quickest way to read what Aerodrome does for the ecosystem.
The protocol sits at the center of Base's onchain trading. It routes swaps, concentrates liquidity for the chain's biggest pairs and pays out fees to the people who lock its token. That activity, more than the size of its locked capital, is where its weight in the ecosystem comes from. Why that gap exists comes down to how Aerodrome is built.
What is Aerodrome and how does it work?
Aerodrome launched in August 2023 as a fork of Velodrome, the Optimism DEX built on Solidly's ve(3,3) design. It combines stable and volatile automated market maker pools with Slipstream, a concentrated liquidity system similar to Uniswap V3. Governance runs through veAERO, the vote-escrowed version of the AERO token.
The core idea is a loop. Traders pay fees. Nearly all of those fees, plus outside incentives known as bribes, flow to veAERO voters. Those voters then direct AERO emissions toward the pools they want to support, which pulls in more liquidity and, in theory, more volume. Aerodrome launched without venture funding or a token sale, setting it apart from many Base projects.
How big is Aerodrome right now?
The headline numbers, drawn from DefiLlama, Dune Analytics and CoinMarketCap in early July 2026, show a protocol that trades far more than it holds.
- TVL sits at about $322.59 million, almost entirely on Base.
- 24-hour volume is about $474 million, with roughly $3.15 billion over seven days and $15.6 billion over 30 days.
- Cumulative volume since launch has passed $400 billion, all on Base.
- Fees run near $169 million a year, with about $129 million of that flowing to veAERO holders. DefiLlama lists revenue and holder revenue as the same figure, reflecting the protocol's zero-leak design.
The token side is smaller than the trading side suggests. AERO trades near $0.54, up on the day, for a market cap around $520 million and a fully diluted value close to $1.04 billion. DefiLlama, working off a slightly older $0.51 price, puts those figures a little lower. BaseScan lists roughly 747,000 AERO holders. About 43,700 of them lock their tokens as veAERO, tying up close to half the supply for an average of about 3.6 years. Daily active addresses sit around 3,460 by DefiLlama's count, though some trader analytics show busier stretches above 11,000, with heavy repeat usage.
Does Aerodrome dominate Base?
By volume, yes. By locked capital, no.
Base's total TVL is about $4.28 billion in early July 2026. Aerodrome's roughly $323 million puts it sixth on the chain, behind lending and risk-curation protocols led by Morpho Blue at about $2.82 billion. Even among DEXes, Uniswap holds more locked value on Base, near $399 million against Aerodrome's $323 million.
Volume tells the opposite story. Base handled about $773 million in DEX volume over a recent 24-hour window. Aerodrome accounted for roughly $474 million of it, nearly 61 percent. Broader 2026 analyses tend to put its share of Base DEX volume in the 57 to 60 percent range. Either way, it is the busiest trading venue on the chain by a wide margin.
Why does the volume beat the TVL?
The gap comes from turnover. Aerodrome's concentrated liquidity pools, such as WETH/USDC, drive much of the trading through a relatively thin base of capital. A pool does not need to be the largest to be the most active. That capital efficiency lets Aerodrome match or beat Uniswap on volume while holding less.
The bribe system adds to the effect. High voter incentives keep liquidity providers focused on the pools that matter, which keeps spreads tight and volume high. That flywheel has a cost. Incentives run near $150 million a year, more than the roughly $129 million the protocol returns to holders, so its annualized earnings sit slightly negative. It also ties Aerodrome's fortunes to Base itself. When Base activity rises, Aerodrome tends to capture the bulk of it.
Aerodrome's TVL once ran far higher, peaking near $1.2 billion across late 2024 and early 2025 before market conditions pulled it back toward $320 million.
What Aerodrome means for Base
Aerodrome functions as Base's trading backbone. It provides the deepest liquidity for the chain's stablecoins, its major pairs and many of its smaller tokens. It works alongside @coinbase's onboarding funnel, giving new @base users a place to swap as soon as they arrive. Recent work has centered on Slipstream upgrades and discussion of newer allocation mechanics.
Aerodrome isn't the largest protocol on the chain, but it is the one where most of the trading happens.
Sources
- DefiLlama is the primary source for Aerodrome's TVL, volume, annualized fees and revenue, plus Base chain totals and protocol rankings.
- Aerodrome is the official protocol site and documentation, covering the ve(3,3) model, veAERO and Slipstream.
- Dune Analytics hosts community dashboards with epoch-level data, cumulative volume and veAERO statistics.
- CoinMarketCap provides AERO price, market cap, fully diluted value and supply figures.
- BaseScan provides onchain AERO token holder counts and contract activity.
- Blockworks offers trader analytics and liquidity breakdowns for Aerodrome pools.
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Disclaimer
Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article do not necessarily represent the views of BSCN. The information provided in this article is for educational and entertainment purposes only and should not be construed as investment advice, or advice of any kind. BSCN assumes no responsibility for any investment decisions made based on the information provided in this article. If you believe that the article should be amended, please reach out to the BSCN team by emailing [email protected].
Author
Crypto RichRich has been researching cryptocurrency and blockchain technology for eight years and has served as a senior analyst at BSCN since its founding in 2020. He focuses on fundamental analysis of early-stage crypto projects and tokens and has published in-depth research reports on over 200 emerging protocols. Rich also writes about broader technology and scientific trends and maintains active involvement in the crypto community through X/Twitter Spaces, and leading industry events.
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