Aave Labs has proposed a major overhaul of how crypto assets are reviewed and approved across the Aave ecosystem, introducing a standardized Technical Asset Listing Framework for listings on Aave V3, Aave V4, and Horizon.
According to the proposal, published as an Aave Request for Comment (ARFC), this aims to create a clearer and more consistent process for onboarding assets while strengthening technical risk-management standards across the protocol.
The framework is designed to make asset listings more transparent, repeatable, and easier for governance participants to evaluate as Aave expands across more blockchains and asset categories.
Aave targets hidden risks in DeFi infrastructure
The proposal comes as DeFi protocols continue facing growing risks tied to cross-chain bridge exploits, weak multisig protections, upgradeable smart contracts, and unreliable oracle systems.
Aave Labs warned that many technical weaknesses are often overlooked during standard market analysis despite having direct implications for protocol safety and solvency.
“These issues are often technical, but they have direct implications for Aave’s solvency, liquidations, collateral configuration, oracle design, and emergency response,” the proposal noted.
To reduce those risks, Aave wants future asset listings to undergo standardized technical reviews covering ERC20 compatibility, oracle reliability, minting and burning controls, access-control security, upgradeability risks, bridge infrastructure, audit history and bug bounties, and external dependencies and composability.
The framework would apply not only to new listings but also to existing assets undergoing material changes or periodic technical reassessments.
Stablecoins and bridged assets face stricter standards
A major focus of the proposal is stablecoins, bridged assets, liquid staking tokens (LSTs), liquid restaking tokens (LRTs), and tokenized real-world assets, which Aave considers more exposed to infrastructure and governance risks.
Under the proposed framework, assets would need secure minting systems, reliable oracle infrastructure, transparent governance controls, and audited codebases before qualifying for onboarding.
Aave Labs also reinforced its preference for Chainlink-based oracle systems.
“A Chainlink price feed must exist on the target chain and be used directly or through a CAPO adapter where appropriate,” the proposal stated.
The framework further warns against several high-risk token structures, including unbounded minting rights, weak multisig governance, upgradeable contracts without timelocks, fee-on-transfer tokens, unsupported rebasing mechanisms, weak bridge administration controls.
The proposal specifically highlights bridge-related risks, warning that vulnerabilities on an asset’s origin chain can undermine the integrity of the entire cross-chain token supply.
New governance and security monitoring rules
As part of the overhaul, Aave Labs introduced a security classification system for privileged wallet and governance structures. The framework ranks governance protections from Level 0 to Level 5, ranging from single-wallet control with no delay mechanisms to fully decentralized onchain DAO governance with timelocks.
Assets operating under weaker security models could face reduced exposure caps, lower collateral ratios, stricter monitoring requirements, or delayed onboarding approvals.
The proposal also calls for annual technical reassessments for actively listed assets, alongside immediate reviews following major upgrades, governance changes, bridge modifications, or security incidents. “Material changes include contract upgrades, new chain deployments, new or modified bridge routes, changes to privileged role holders or security configuration, mint-cap modifications, dependency changes, and security incidents,” Aave Labs wrote.
Moreover, as Aave moves to tighten its overarching risk parameters, the protocol is simultaneously exploring significant expansions in capital efficiency via Aave V4.
Earlier this week, Babylon Labs submitted a Temp Check proposal to introduce native Bitcoin collateral support for Aave V4 through two new “V4 Spokes,” signaling Aave’s growing interest in expanding beyond traditional Ethereum-based collateral markets.
As more complex assets enter DeFi lending markets, Aave said technical standards need to become “more consistent, transparent, and repeatable” across governance proposals.
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