Aave has restored WETH loan-to-value ratios to their pre-incident levels across affected V3 deployments, reversing temporary restrictions that had reduced borrowing capacity for users on several markets.
Loan-to-value ratio, or LTV, determines how much a user can borrow against collateral deposited on a lending platform. A higher LTV means more borrowing power per unit of collateral. When Aave reduced WETH LTV settings earlier this year, users on affected V3 markets could borrow less against their wrapped Ether deposits.
The restoration was executed through a Direct-to-AIP governance proposal titled “WETH Unfreeze and LTV Restoration across Aave V3 Instances.” The proposal also unfroze WETH on deployments where it had been temporarily frozen, returning the asset to full functionality.
The restrictions trace back to a security incident involving rsETH. An incident report published on Aave governance on April 20, 2026, detailed the event that triggered the precautionary measures.
Lending protocols routinely tighten risk parameters during stress events to protect depositors. Reducing LTV ratios and freezing assets are standard responses that limit new borrowing exposure while the protocol team assesses damage and develops a remediation plan.
These kinds of rapid parameter shifts can have cascading effects. In past DeFi stress episodes, sudden collateral changes have contributed to large-scale liquidations across crypto markets, making the timing of both freezes and unfreezes critical for user positions.
The fact that Aave used a Direct-to-AIP process, bypassing the longer standard governance timeline, indicates the community treated both the original freeze and this restoration as time-sensitive risk management decisions.
Users who hold WETH as collateral on affected Aave V3 deployments can now borrow at the same ratios that were available before the incident. In practical terms, this means restored borrowing capacity without needing to deposit additional collateral.
The change applies specifically to V3 deployments that were affected by the earlier restrictions. Aave operates V3 across multiple chains, and not all deployments were impacted. Users should verify whether the specific market they use was among those covered by the governance proposal.
This restoration reflects Aave’s assessment that the risk conditions prompting the original freeze have been sufficiently resolved. Understanding how DeFi protocols manage collateral risk parameters is as important as grasping the technical constraints built into blockchain systems at the base layer.
Borrowers who adjusted their positions during the restricted period, either by adding collateral or reducing loans, may now have room to rebalance. The episode also underscores why DeFi users should monitor governance channels directly, particularly during periods when new products and market structures are drawing fresh capital into the ecosystem.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.


