TL;DR
Galaxy Digital introduced the Galaxy Onchain Financing Rate (GOFR), a program of crypto lending that is fully managed and targets institutions, high-net-worth individuals, and accredited investors seeking access to DeFi credit markets without operating directly on the blockchain.
GOFR’s mechanism aggregates the variable rates of onchain protocols such as Aave, Morpho, Spark, and Kamino to construct a single borrowing rate, continuously rebalanced and optimized. The company acts as the sole counterparty for borrowers, managing wallets, private keys, and smart contract interactions. Clients may also offer native bitcoin as collateral, with the firm handling the wrapping process.
We just launched GOFR — the Galaxy Onchain Financing Rate.
For the first time, institutions can access a single, continuously rebalanced rate across Aave, Morpho, Spark, and more. Dynamically optimized in real time and rebalanced across DeFi venues, a single Galaxy Rate. pic.twitter.com/kem3qHy8vT
— Galaxy (@galaxyhq) July 14, 2026
“Institutions have been clear: the opportunity in onchain credit is real, but the infrastructure needed to access it directly is not something they want to build or manage,” said Max Bareiss, the firm’s head of lending, in a statement.
Beyond its function as a financing product, the company plans to publish the GOFR rate publicly, with 7- and 30-day averages intended to serve as a benchmark for onchain financing in USDC, USDT, and ETH. This design is a key differentiator from competitors such as Coinbase, whose lending service on Morpho surpassed $1 billion in originated loans in just eight months since launch, but operates with a single liquidity source.

The proposal also incorporates circuit breakers that suspend new deployments if certain risk thresholds are exceeded. The minimum loan size is $1 million, with flexible terms and maturities on offer.
The initiative could help offset the difficult moment the company is navigating: Galaxy recorded a net loss of $216 million in the first quarter of 2026, driven primarily by falling prices in the crypto asset market that weighed on its balance sheet.