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What Is a DAO?

A DAO is an organisation run by code and token-holder votes instead of a central boss. Here is how they work and where they fall short.

Não é aconselhamento financeiro. This article is for informational purposes only. Cryptocurrency is volatile and high-risk — do your own research.

DAO stands for Decentralised Autonomous Organisation — a group that coordinates through rules written in smart contracts and decisions made by its members, rather than a chief executive and a boardroom.

How a DAO works

Members typically hold a governance token, and that token is used to vote on proposals — anything from changing a protocol’s fees to spending money from a shared treasury. Votes and the treasury live on-chain, so the rules are transparent and enforced automatically by code rather than by trust in a manager.

What they are used for

Many of the biggest DeFi protocols, such as Uniswap and Aave, are governed by DAOs. Others act as investment clubs, grant funds, or communities pooling money toward a shared goal. The common thread is collective, on-chain ownership.

The limitations

DAOs are still an experiment. Voter turnout is often low, large holders (“whales”) can dominate decisions, smart-contract bugs can be catastrophic, and the legal status of a DAO is unclear in most countries. They are a genuinely new way to organise — powerful in theory, and still maturing in practice.

Browse more definitions in our crypto glossary. Not financial advice.

About the author Verified
Max Clark
Blockchain & Web3 Reporter

Max Clark reports on blockchain infrastructure, cryptocurrency markets, decentralized finance, AI-powered blockchain applications, and next-generation Web3 technologies. His coverage includes Layer 1 and Layer 2 ecosystems, token launches, developer innovation,…

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