At a glance
Uniswap V3 ↗ and Curve ↗ are two of DeFi’s most used DEXs, but they serve different liquidity models. Uniswap V3 commands ~$4B TVL across 9 chains with its concentrated-liquidity AMM, giving LPs precise control over price ranges. Curve holds ~$2B TVL on 8 chains, specializing in ultra-low-slippage swaps for stablecoins and pegged assets via its stableswap algorithm. This comparison breaks down where each protocol excels and which one fits your trading needs.
Key differences
Three dimensions draw the clearest line between the two:
1. Liquidity model and use case
Uniswap V3 lets LPs allocate capital to custom price ranges, enabling multiple fee tiers and capital-efficient swaps for volatile pairs. Curve’s stableswap is optimized for assets that trade near parity; it offers deep liquidity on stablecoin pairs and liquid staking token derivatives with minimal price impact.
2. Chain presence and TVL
Uniswap V3 is deployed on 9 chains (Ethereum, Arbitrum, Optimism, Polygon, Base, BNB, Avalanche, Celo, Blast) with ~$4B TVL. Curve spans 8 chains (Ethereum, Arbitrum, Optimism, Polygon, Avalanche, Base, Fantom, Gnosis) with ~$2B TVL. Uniswap V3’s broader chain footprint gives it an edge in raw reach and overall locked value.
3. Governance and incentive design
Uniswap V3 governance is token‑holder driven (UNI), with fee switches controlled by the DAO. Curve uses vote‑escrowed CRV (veCRV) that directs gauge emissions and enables a bribes market, creating a competitive liquidity flywheel for stablecoin and correlated asset pools.
Neither protocol has recorded major incidents in the data we reviewed; both have undergone multiple top‑tier audits (Trail of Bits on both, plus ABDK/samczsun for Uniswap V3 and Quantstamp/ChainSecurity for Curve).
Security and track record
Uniswap V3 has been audited by Trail of Bits, ABDK, and samczsun since its 2021 launch, while Curve has passed reviews from Trail of Bits, Quantstamp, and ChainSecurity since 2020. No exploits or security incidents are recorded for either in our dataset, indicating a strong operational history. Both are considered battle‑tested — Uniswap V3 through four years of high‑volume trading, Curve through six years of stablecoin‑focused swaps. Users can treat security as a tie; differences come down to design preferences.
Fees and costs
Specific fee schedules aren’t disclosed in our dataset. Uniswap V3 pools offer multiple tiers (commonly 0.05% for stable pairs, 0.30% for standard, 1% for exotic), while Curve relies on low static fees for its stableswap pools and variable fees for volatile crypto pools. Actual costs depend on gas conditions, chain, and pool; check uniswap.org and curve.fi for live fee data.
Which should you choose
Pick Uniswap V3 if you:
- Trade a wide range of tokens, including volatile pairs
- Want to deploy LP positions in custom price intervals
- Need multi‑chain access to a large pool of liquidity
Pick Curve if you:
- Primarily swap stablecoins, LSTs, or other correlated assets
- Care most about minimal slippage and predictable pricing on pegged trades
- Participate in veCRV incentives and bribe markets
Verdict
Context‑dependent. Uniswap V3 wins on raw TVL, chain breadth, and general‑purpose swaps, while Curve is the go‑to venue for low‑slippage stablecoin and pegged‑asset trades. Your use case determines which DEX serves you better.