Etherfi submitted a TEMP CHECK proposal to the Aave governance forum on July 3 to build a dedicated, Etherfi-managed Aave V4 whitelabel instance on Optimism mainnet. The goal: replace Etherfi Cash’s existing proprietary debt manager with Aave’s battle-tested lending architecture, starting with a $175M initial asset cap and a plan to scale toward $500M by the end of 2026.
What the deal actually looks like
Etherfi would operate a specialized Aave V4 hub exclusively for its credit card backend. In exchange, Aave DAO would receive 20% of all reserve-factor revenue generated by the instance. At full deployment, that revenue share translates to an estimated $5-6 million annually flowing to the Aave DAO.
The proposal also calls for deploying a dedicated GHO GSM on Optimism. This would create direct demand for GHO through real-world card spending.
Etherfi currently reports approximately 70,000 active cardholders with $1 billion in annualized spending flowing through its Visa card product.
Why Optimism, and who’s paying for what
The Optimism Foundation is committing $20M from its treasury to support the initiative, alongside additional incentive arrangements that haven’t been fully detailed in the governance discussion yet.
The deployment timeline is aggressive. Etherfi is targeting completion within July 2026, with an initial five-day feedback window for the governance community before the proposal moves to a snapshot temp check vote.
The bigger picture for Aave and DeFi lending
The current total value locked in discussions around this deployment sits at approximately $220M, with the $175M initial cap designed to prove the concept before scaling.
The GHO integration deserves particular attention. Aave’s stablecoin has struggled to find demand drivers that don’t rely on incentive programs or recursive yield strategies. A credit card product that converts GHO to fiat at the point of sale creates the kind of sustainable, repeated demand that purely on-chain use cases haven’t delivered at scale.
What this means for investors
For AAVE token holders, the revenue-sharing model creates a new income stream tied to real-world consumer spending rather than volatile crypto trading activity. The $5-6M annual projection at full scale might not sound massive for a protocol with Aave’s market cap, but the precedent matters more than the initial dollars.
The risk side of the equation isn’t trivial. Running a credit card backend on a smart contract protocol introduces attack surface that traditional fintech infrastructure doesn’t have. Any exploit on this instance could mean disrupted card payments for tens of thousands of users.
There’s also governance risk to consider. The proposal still needs to pass through Aave’s full governance process, and the community has historically been cautious about whitelabel deployments that could create reputational exposure. The five-day feedback window will be telling.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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