Many DeFi protocols and DAOs are designed to be steered by their communities rather than a boardroom, and governance tokens are the voting shares that make that possible. Holding the token lets you put forward proposals and vote on them, with voting power usually proportional to how many tokens you hold. The decisions on the table can pull real levers: adjusting fees, funding development, changing risk parameters, or directing a treasury that may be worth many millions.
The intent is to decentralise control and align a protocol with the people who actually use it. In practice, governance tokens raise a familiar set of questions. Because votes are weighted by holdings, influence often concentrates among the largest holders, sometimes the founding team or early investors, so one-token-one-vote is a long way from one-person-one-vote. Turnout is also frequently low, which concentrates effective power in even fewer hands than the token distribution alone would suggest.
A governance token is also not necessarily a claim on profits, and its market price can swing on speculation rather than on any governance value it carries. It is important to check what a specific token actually entitles you to before assuming. Crypto House explains what these tokens do and where their limits lie; owning one is a decision for you, and nothing here is investment advice.
Fundamental Analysis in Practice
Key takeaways
- A governance token lets holders vote on a protocol's decisions, usually with power proportional to their holdings.
- The goal is community control, but voting weighted by holdings can concentrate influence among large holders.
- Governance rights are not the same as a claim on profits, and the token's price can move on speculation.
Governance Token — preguntas frecuentes
What can I actually do with a governance token?
You can vote on, and often propose, changes to the protocol, such as fee levels, treasury spending or risk settings. Your influence is typically proportional to how many tokens you hold rather than one vote per person, which shapes who really decides.
Does holding a governance token earn me a share of profits?
Not necessarily. It grants voting rights, which are distinct from any claim on revenue. Some projects connect the two, but many do not, so it is important to check exactly what a specific token entitles you to before assuming it pays anything.
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