Built on Hyperliquid’s HyperEVM, the HyperLend token is moving toward launch with its team unveiling detailed HPL tokenomics and incentive allocations.
HyperLend, a lending protocol on Hyperliquid‘s HyperEVM blockchain, has released the full tokenomics for its native HPL token, committing nearly one-third of its total supply to ecosystem incentives. According to the team, this structure is intended to support sustainable growth of the protocol and its surrounding infrastructure.
The project positions itself as core banking infrastructure for the broader Hyperliquid ecosystem. Moreover, it has already raised $1.7 million from crypto-native investors including RockawayX, Nucleus, Vistula Capital, Dewhales Capital, No Limit Holdings, Duplicate Capital, Dumpster, and YAM.
In addition to its backers, HyperLend has secured strategic partners across decentralized finance. These include Aave, Chainlink, Circle, Ethena, Wintermute, Pyth Network, RedStone, and Resolv, among others, further anchoring the protocol within the on-chain credit market.
Under the published HPL tokenomics, 30.14% of the total supply has been earmarked for ecosystem growth and incentives, making it the single largest allocation category. This pool will be used to reward activity within the protocol and bootstrap adoption across the network.
Beyond that incentives tranche, genesis participants are set to receive 25% of the supply, while core contributors have been allocated 22.5%. Strategic investors will receive 17.36% of tokens, with the remaining 5% reserved for liquidity provision on relevant markets. That said, the team has not yet detailed the exact venues for that liquidity.
The HyperLend team stated that the vesting structure has been designed to secure long-term alignment among stakeholders rather than short-term speculation. Strategic investors will receive 10% of their allocation at the token generation event (TGE), followed by a four-month cliff period and a two-year linear unlock, spreading emissions over time.
Core contributors will operate under a separate vesting schedule, with a one-year cliff and a subsequent two-year linear unlock. However, the project has not disclosed individual allocation sizes for specific team members or advisors, keeping those details at the aggregate level.
Builder-code exchanges and HIP-3 exchanges within the Hyperliquid ecosystem will be able to integrate HyperLend to add native credit rails and improve collateral efficiency. This setup aims to let partners access on-chain lending functionality without rebuilding a credit layer from scratch, potentially accelerating credit market depth on the chain.
The team expects that close integration with leading DeFi infrastructure providers such as Aave and Chainlink will support composability. The goal is to enable new lending and borrowing products that tie directly into existing derivatives and spot markets running on Hyperliquid.
Within this framework, the hyperlend token is intended to function as the primary vehicle for distributing ecosystem growth incentives and aligning users, contributors, and investors under a single incentive design.
Staking and locking features are scheduled to go live shortly after the TGE, according to the project’s announcement. However, HyperLend underlined that the HPL token is not yet live and stressed that any currently circulating tokens or claim links should be treated as illegitimate.
The protocol urged users to trust only communications coming from official HyperLend channels when it comes to launch timelines, claim portals, or staking interfaces. That said, no precise TGE date has been made public at this stage, leaving the market waiting for further confirmation.
“Rebates will be funded from the reserve factor and distributed based on stake or lock requirements and participation criteria,” HyperLend said in its communication. Moreover, the team added that further specifics about staking mechanics and rebate structures will be shared closer to activation of those features.
The launch of HyperEVM in early 2025 brought general-purpose programmability to the Hyperliquid platform, which had initially focused on perpetual futures trading. This shift opened the door for more sophisticated financial applications, including lending markets, structured products, and other DeFi primitives.
Since going live, the HyperEVM environment has expanded to support more than 100 decentralized applications. Moreover, this growth signals increasing developer interest in deploying capital-efficient protocols such as HyperLend on the infrastructure, strengthening the ecosystem’s appeal to traders and long-term on-chain borrowers alike.
So, HyperLend’s HPL tokenomics, fundraising, and planned incentive programs position the protocol as a core credit layer within Hyperliquid’s evolving DeFi stack, with clear emphasis on long-term alignment and measured token distribution.


