When you hold xSUSHI, the staked, locked version of the SUSHI token used for governance and rewards on Uniswap. Also known as staking SUSHI, it’s not just a token—it’s your ticket to earning more SUSHI over time and having a say in how the platform evolves. Unlike regular SUSHI, which you can trade freely, xSUSHI is what you get when you lock your SUSHI in Uniswap’s voting escrow. You don’t trade it on exchanges. You hold it. And the longer you hold it, the more rewards you earn.
This system was built to fix a simple problem: people were dumping SUSHI right after earning it, which hurt the platform’s stability. By locking tokens, Uniswap encouraged long-term commitment. The result? Holders who lock their SUSHI for up to four years get boosted voting power and extra rewards. It’s not magic—it’s math. The more you lock and the longer you lock it, the more xSUSHI you earn, and the more influence you have over proposals like fee changes, treasury allocations, or new integrations.
And it’s not just about voting. xSUSHI holders also get a share of trading fees from Uniswap’s ecosystem. That means every time someone swaps tokens on Uniswap, a portion of the fees flows back to those who’ve locked their SUSHI. It turns passive holding into active participation. You’re not just a user—you’re a stakeholder.
Some people confuse xSUSHI with other DeFi tokens like SUSHI, the native governance token of the SushiSwap protocol. Also known as SushiSwap token, it’s the base asset that gets converted into xSUSHI when staked. Others mix it up with DeFi, a broad category of financial applications built on blockchain without intermediaries. Also known as decentralized finance, it’s the ecosystem where xSUSHI lives and thrives. But xSUSHI is specific. It’s not a new coin. It’s a locked version of an existing one, designed to align incentives. If you’re into yield farming, governance, or long-term DeFi rewards, xSUSHI isn’t optional—it’s essential.
What you’ll find below are real, no-fluff guides on how to claim xSUSHI, how to track your rewards, what happens when you unlock it, and how it compares to similar systems on other platforms. You’ll also see posts that expose scams pretending to be xSUSHI airdrops, explain why some people lose money by unlocking too early, and break down how Uniswap’s fee distribution actually works behind the scenes. This isn’t theory. These are the tools and warnings that matter if you’re serious about DeFi.