DeFi protocols are starting to judge borrowers by their wallet history instead of their collateral stack, and that shift could open crypto lending to people banks would never touch.
Right now, if you want to borrow crypto against crypto, you almost always have to overcollateralize. Put up $150 in ETH to borrow $100 in stablecoins on Aave or Compound, and if the market moves against you, you get liquidated. That's not credit. That's a pawn shop with better software. An onchain credit score is the thing that's supposed to change that: a reputation built from your wallet's transaction history, repayment record, and asset behavior, used to let you borrow more than you put down.
The idea sounds simple. It isn't, and the gap between the pitch and the plumbing is where most of the interesting problems live.
A traditional FICO score pulls from five categories: payment history, amounts owed, length of credit history, new credit, and credit mix. Onchain credit scoring borrows the shape of that model but has to invent its own inputs, because there's no central bureau watching a wallet's whole life. Protocols and scoring startups instead look at things like: how long has this wallet existed, has it repaid loans on other protocols without liquidation, does it hold assets that suggest it isn't just a fresh address created to farm a score, and does its transaction pattern look like a real person managing money rather than a bot cycling funds through a mixer.
Cred Protocol, built by a team that includes former Compound contributors, scores wallets from 300 to 850, deliberately mirroring the FICO range so the number means something to a user coming from traditional finance. Spectral Finance built a similar model called the MACRO score, which it used to gate access to undercollateralized pools before shutting that specific product down in 2023 when demand didn't materialize. Both approaches share the same core bet: that a wallet's history on public blockchains is a rich enough signal to substitute for a bank pulling your Experian file.
The bet has a real weakness. Your credit history at a bank is tied to your legal identity, which is precisely what makes it enforceable. A wallet's history is tied to an address, and addresses are cheap. Nothing stops a borrower from simply abandoning a wallet with a bad score and starting fresh, the way nothing stops someone from declaring bankruptcy except that in traditional finance it shows up on their record for seven years and follows them by name. Onchain, there's no name to follow.
How undercollateralized lending crypto is actually being built
Because of that weakness, the protocols furthest along in undercollateralized lending crypto don't rely on wallet history alone. They pair it with something that reintroduces accountability: real-world identity, institutional backing, or delegated trust.
Maple Finance is the clearest example that's actually moved money. Maple runs lending pools where institutional borrowers, market makers and trading firms, borrow stablecoins with far less collateral than a retail DeFi user would need, because pool delegates underwrite them the way a bank's credit committee would, using off-chain financials alongside onchain behavior. Maple has originated more than $2 billion in loans since 2021, according to its own protocol data, and survived defaults from firms like Orthogonal Trading and Auros during the 2022 credit crunch, paying out from insurance funds rather than collapsing the pools entirely. That's not a hypothetical stress test. That's a real one, and Maple's model held up worse than its marketing but better than most of its undercollateralized peers.
Goldfinch takes a different route aimed at borrowers who aren't crypto-native at all: fintech lenders in Southeast Asia, Africa, and Latin America borrow stablecoins to fund real-world loans, backed by
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