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TurboLoop
DeFi Glossary

DeFi Insurance

DeFi insurance provides coverage against smart contract exploits, protocol hacks, and other DeFi-specific risks — allowing users to protect their deposits against technical failures.

What is DeFi insurance?

DeFi insurance (or DeFi cover) is a decentralised insurance product that pays out if a covered protocol is hacked or exploits occur. It works like traditional insurance but is governed by smart contracts and community claims assessment.

Major DeFi insurance providers

  • Nexus Mutual — the largest DeFi insurer, community-governed
  • InsurAce — multi-chain coverage
  • Unslashed Finance — institutional-grade DeFi cover
  • Sherlock — smart contract audit + insurance combined

What DeFi insurance covers

  • Smart contract exploits
  • Oracle manipulation attacks
  • Protocol governance attacks
  • Stablecoin depegging (some policies)

What it doesn't cover

  • Rug pulls (often excluded)
  • User error (sending to wrong address)
  • Market losses
  • Regulatory action

Cost of DeFi insurance

Coverage typically costs 1%–5% of the covered amount per year, depending on the protocol's risk profile. For a $10,000 deposit, insurance might cost $100–$500/year.

Is DeFi insurance worth it?

For large deposits, insurance can provide peace of mind. For protocols with strong security (audited, renounced, locked liquidity), the risk being insured against is already low — making insurance optional rather than essential.

TurboLoop's smart contracts are audited by CertiK and Hacken. The protocol does not carry insurance itself, but users can obtain third-party cover via Nexus Mutual or InsurAce for added peace of mind.

View Security Audits

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