There is no single winner. Here are the six criteria that decide it, and how USDC, USDT, USDS, and DAI actually score against them.
There is no single best stablecoin. Six checkable criteria decide the right one for you.One of the most-read rankings of the largest stablecoins, updated by The Motley Fool in April 2026, lists DAI as the fourth-biggest coin and never mentions USDS. Two months later, that table describes a market that no longer exists: between April and May 2026, Binance, Coinbase, and Crypto.com converted customer DAI into USDS, its upgraded successor, and USDS now sits third by market cap at roughly $10 billion.
So what are the best stablecoins to hold this year? There is no single best. The right coin depends on six things you can check yourself: backing quality, transparency, peg stability, liquidity, track record, and redemption. More than $300 billion now sits in stablecoins, and close to nine dollars in ten of it is in just two coins, USDT and USDC.
One more fact shapes the whole decision in 2026: most stablecoins pay their holders nothing, and only some have a yield-bearing form. A ranking sorted by size went stale in two months. The criteria below will still work next year, so this guide leads with them, then holds the four major dollar coins up against each one.
The best stablecoin for you depends on backing quality, transparency, peg stability, liquidity, track record, and redemption. Each of these is checkable before you buy, either in the issuer’s attestations or directly onchain. A coin can be enormous and still score poorly on the criterion that matters most for your use, which is why size alone is a weak filter.
The six criteria that decide which stablecoin is worth holding, all verifiable before you buy.Here is what each criterion means in practice:
The collateral model behind a stablecoin determines most of these scores at once, so identifying the model is the fastest first check.
The four major dollar stablecoins in 2026 are USDT and USDC, both fiat-backed and company-issued, USDS, which is crypto and real-world-asset collateralized and governed onchain, and DAI, the predecessor of USDS. They hold their pegs in different ways, and they treat their holders differently, especially on transparency and yield.
A deeper head-to-head of the three live coins deserves its own piece; a practical USDC vs USDT vs USDS comparison is coming in this series. For a fuller risk treatment of the category, see Are Stablecoins Safe? Understanding the Real Risks.
There is no single safest stablecoin. Lower-risk coins share traits you can verify: transparent backing, more value behind the token than in circulation, a redemption path that works under stress, and years of operation without a core failure. None are risk-free, and each model fails in its own way.
The record shows this concretely. In March 2023, USDC fell to $0.87 after Circle disclosed $3.3 billion of reserves stuck at the failing Silicon Valley Bank, recovering only when regulators guaranteed the deposits. In May 2022, the algorithmic coin TerraUSD erased tens of billions of dollars in days because its backing was mostly a subsidy and belief.
Two depegs, two causes: USDC recovered when SVB deposits were guaranteed; UST’s algorithmic backing never came back. Curves are illustrative, drawn from the cited events.Fiat-backed coins concentrate banking and issuer risk. Crypto-collateralized coins like USDS trade that for smart-contract risk and collateral volatility, contained by overcollateralization. USDS also carries a disclosed, speculative-grade B- credit rating from S&P Global, the first ever issued to a DeFi protocol, which flagged a thin capital buffer and depositor concentration.
That a holder can read the rating and check the collateral the same afternoon is the transparency the category has mostly lacked. Why depegs happen and how to stay protected covers the failure modes in detail.
Most stablecoins pay holders nothing. Of the four major coins, only USDS has a yield-bearing form, sUSDS, which accrues the Sky Savings Rate. USDC and USDT do not pass yield to people who simply hold them, and under the GENIUS Act, enacted in July 2025, compliant US issuers are barred from paying holders interest at all.
The reserves behind the big fiat-backed coins earn Treasury interest every day. The law now fixes where that interest goes, and it is not to you.
Platforms have built workarounds: Coinbase, for example, pays rewards on USDC balances from its own revenue, and the higher advertised number is real, with platform custody as the trade you make for it.
The structural alternative is a coin designed to route protocol revenue to holders. You supply USDS through Sky.money, a non-custodial interface to Sky Protocol, receive sUSDS, and it accrues the Sky Savings Rate, a variable, governance-set rate funded by Sky Protocol revenue generated through the Sky Agent Network.
How the yield-bearing form of USDS works, fine print included: variable rate, soft peg, smart-contract risk. Check the live rate before acting.You can redeem for USDS plus accrued yield at any time, and the rate sat in the mid-single digits as of mid-2026; check the live figure at financial.skyeco.com because governance can change it.
That yield is variable, uninsured, and carries smart-contract risk, so it belongs in the decision as an option, and never as the whole reason. What stablecoin yield is and how much you can earn covers the mechanics and the realistic ranges.
Match the coin to the job you need done. Traders and anyone who values raw liquidity gravitate to USDT. Businesses and users who want a regulated, frequently attested fiat-backed coin pick USDC. Holders who want onchain transparency, overcollateralized backing, and the option to earn yield choose USDS. DAI’s job has passed to its successor.
A short process keeps the decision honest:
That last step is the cheapest protection available. Diversifying across issuers and collateral models means a single bank failure, issuer decision, or contract bug cannot touch your whole balance.
The best stablecoins to hold this year are the ones you have actually checked, and for most holders in 2026 that shortlist is USDT, USDC, and USDS, split by job.
My own approach is a split: a fiat-backed coin for moving money, and USDS for the balance that sits, because I can verify the collateral onchain and the idle part earns the Sky Savings Rate instead of earning the issuer’s shareholders a return.
Whatever you pick, read the backing before the ranking.
What are the best stablecoins to hold this year?
There is no single best stablecoin. The strongest candidates in 2026 are USDT for liquidity, USDC for regulated fiat backing, and USDS for onchain transparency, overcollateralization, and its yield-bearing form, judged against backing, peg history, and redemption.
What is the safest stablecoin?
No stablecoin is safest in the absolute. Lower-risk coins are transparent about their backing, hold more value than they issue, redeem reliably under stress, and have operated for years without a core failure. None are risk-free.
Which stablecoins are yield-bearing?
Only some stablecoins have a yield-bearing form. USDS has sUSDS, which accrues the variable, governance-set Sky Savings Rate. USDC and USDT do not pass yield to holders, and US law bars compliant issuers from paying interest.
Is USDS the same as DAI?
USDS is the upgrade of DAI, sharing the same MakerDAO lineage. Major exchanges converted customer DAI to USDS in April and May 2026. DAI still exists onchain, and new development and yield features live on USDS.
Should I hold more than one stablecoin?
Yes, if the balance matters to you. Holding two coins with different backing models, one fiat-backed and one overcollateralized onchain, means no single issuer, bank, or contract failure affects everything you hold.
How do I judge whether a stablecoin is trustworthy?
Check five things: what backs it, whether you can verify that backing, how the peg behaved in past stress, how redemption works, and how long the system has run without a core failure. Anything you cannot verify, treat as risk.
What Are the Best Stablecoins to Hold This Year? (2026) was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


