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DAO Voting Power Calculator

What is DAO Voting Power Calculator?

The DAO Voting Power Calculator computes your governance influence in a Decentralized Autonomous Organization based on your token holdings, delegation received, and the voting mechanism used by the protocol. DAOs are blockchain-based organizations where decisions about treasury allocation, protocol upgrades, fee structures, and strategic direction are made through on-chain governance votes rather than by a centralized management team. Your voting power determines how much influence you have over these decisions. The calculator supports three primary voting mechanisms. Token-weighted voting is the simplest: one token equals one vote, and your power is directly proportional to your holdings. Quadratic voting reduces the influence of large holders by counting votes as the square root of tokens committed, making it harder for whales to dominate. Conviction voting weights votes by how long they have been committed to a proposal, rewarding patient, dedicated governance participants over those who vote at the last minute. Beyond raw token holdings, the calculator accounts for delegation, where other token holders assign their voting power to you without transferring tokens. Delegated voting is common in protocols like Uniswap, Compound, and ENS, where most token holders are passive and delegate to active governance participants. A delegate with 50000 UNI tokens of their own plus 2 million delegated UNI has far more governance influence than their personal holdings suggest. The calculator also models quorum requirements (the minimum participation needed for a vote to be valid), proposal thresholds (the minimum tokens needed to create a proposal), and the practical power dynamics of DAO governance including voter apathy, whale concentration, and the effective cost of swinging a close vote. Understanding your governance power is essential for anyone holding governance tokens as an investment, since governance decisions directly affect protocol revenue, token value, and treasury management.

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Formula

f(x)Token-Weighted Voting Power = (Held Tokens + Delegated Tokens) / Total Voting Supply x 100% Quadratic Voting Power = sqrt(Tokens Committed) / Sum of sqrt(All Voters Tokens) x 100% Conviction Voting Power = Tokens x (1 - decay^time) / Total Conviction x 100% Proposal Threshold Check: Can Propose = Held + Delegated >= Proposal Threshold Worked example: You hold 25000 UNI and have received 175000 UNI in delegation. Total voting supply is 500 million UNI. Your voting power = (25000 + 175000) / 500000000 x 100 = 0.04%. Uniswap proposal threshold is 2.5 million UNI (0.5%), so you cannot create proposals. You need 2.3 million more UNI in delegation to reach proposal threshold.

Variable Legend

SymbolNameUnitDescription
VVoting PowerpercentYour share of total governance voting power, expressed as a percentage of supply or active voters
HHeld TokenstokensGovernance tokens in your wallet that you directly control
DDelegated TokenstokensTokens delegated to your address by other holders, giving you their voting power without token transfer
QQuorum Thresholdtokens or percentThe minimum participation required for a governance vote to be considered valid
P_tProposal ThresholdtokensThe minimum voting power required to create a new governance proposal
T_lockLock Durationdays or yearsThe time period tokens are locked in vote-escrowed mechanisms, affecting voting power multiplier

How to DAO Voting Power Calculator

  1. 1Step 1 - Select the DAO and governance framework. The calculator supports major DAOs including Uniswap, Aave, Compound, MakerDAO, ENS, Arbitrum, Optimism, Lido, and Curve. Each has different governance parameters: voting period length, quorum requirements, proposal thresholds, timelock delays, and voting mechanisms. The calculator loads these parameters automatically for the selected DAO.
  2. 2Step 2 - Enter your token holdings. Input the number of governance tokens you hold in your wallet. For protocols like Curve that use vote-escrowed tokens (veCRV), enter the amount locked and the lock duration. Longer lock periods yield more voting power: locking CRV for 4 years gives 1 veCRV per CRV, while locking for 1 year gives only 0.25 veCRV per CRV.
  3. 3Step 3 - Add delegated tokens. Check on-chain data (via Tally, Boardroom, or the protocol governance portal) to see how many tokens have been delegated to your address. The calculator adds these to your personal holdings for total voting power. Note that delegations can be revoked at any time, so delegated power is less stable than personal holdings.
  4. 4Step 4 - The calculator computes your voting power percentage under each applicable mechanism. For token-weighted voting, it divides your total tokens by total supply. For quadratic voting, it computes the square root ratio. For conviction voting, it models the time-decay accumulation. It shows both your absolute power and your relative ranking among all delegates.
  5. 5Step 5 - Evaluate proposal creation ability. Most DAOs require a minimum token threshold to submit proposals. Uniswap requires 2.5 million UNI (0.5% of supply). Compound requires 25000 COMP (0.25%). The calculator checks whether your holdings meet the threshold and, if not, shows how many additional tokens or delegations you need.
  6. 6Step 6 - Model the cost to swing a vote. For active proposals, the calculator estimates how many additional tokens would be needed to change the outcome from pass to fail or vice versa. This marginal vote analysis reveals whether governance power is concentrated (a few whales determine outcomes) or distributed (many participants contribute to close votes).
  7. 7Step 7 - Review the governance dashboard showing your voting power over time, delegation network visualization, historical voting participation rate, comparison of your power against the top 20 delegates, and alerts for upcoming proposals where your vote could be decisive.

Worked Examples

Example 1Uniswap Governance Delegate
Given:Personal holdings: 50000 UNI. Delegated to you: 3.5 million UNI. Total supply: 1 billion UNI. Voting mechanism: token-weighted.
Result:Voting power: 0.355%. Proposal threshold: 2.5 million UNI (met). Rank: approximately top 15 delegate.

With 3.55 million UNI in total voting power, this delegate exceeds the proposal creation threshold and ranks among the top 15 most powerful Uniswap governance participants. However, 98.6% of their power comes from delegation, which could be revoked. Historically, Uniswap governance participation is around 5-10% of supply, so 3.55 million UNI out of approximately 50 million actively voting tokens represents roughly 7% of actual voting power.

Example 2Curve Finance Vote-Escrowed Position
Given:500000 CRV locked for 4 years = 500000 veCRV. Total veCRV supply: 600 million. Mechanism: ve-token weighted.
Result:Voting power: 0.083%. Gauge weight influence: can direct approximately 0.083% of CRV emissions to preferred pools.

Curve uses vote-escrowed CRV (veCRV) for governance, where longer lock periods give more power. This 4-year lock provides maximum power per CRV. The unique aspect of Curve governance is gauge weight voting, where veCRV holders direct CRV emissions to liquidity pools. This has spawned the Curve Wars, where protocols like Convex compete for veCRV to direct emissions to their preferred pools.

Example 3Quadratic Voting in Gitcoin Grants
Given:Your contribution: 10000 dollars. Other contributors: 1000 people averaging 50 dollars each. Mechanism: quadratic funding.
Result:Your quadratic weight: sqrt(10000) = 100. Average other weight: sqrt(50) = 7.07. Your influence is 100x your average co-contributor rather than 200x.

Quadratic voting/funding dramatically reduces the power of large contributors relative to linear (dollar-weighted) voting. A 10000 dollar contributor has only 14x the influence of a 50 dollar contributor (100/7.07), not 200x (10000/50). This mechanism prioritizes breadth of support over depth, rewarding projects that attract many small supporters over those funded by a few whales.

Real-World Applications

🏗️

Protocol treasuries worth billions of dollars are governed by DAO voting power. The Uniswap treasury holds approximately 3.4 billion dollars in UNI tokens, and governance votes determine how these funds are deployed, including grants to developers, liquidity incentive programs, and protocol fee switches. A delegate with sufficient voting power can propose and pass a fee switch that redirects trading fees to UNI holders, fundamentally changing the token value proposition. The voting power calculator helps delegates and communities understand who controls these multi-billion dollar decisions.

🔬

Investment DAOs like The LAO, MetaCartel Ventures, and BitDAO use governance voting to make collective investment decisions. Members vote on which projects receive funding, with voting power typically proportional to capital contribution. A member who contributed 100 ETH to a 10000 ETH investment DAO holds 1% voting power and can influence portfolio allocation accordingly. The calculator helps members understand their influence and whether additional contributions are needed to meaningfully affect investment decisions.

📊

The Curve Wars demonstrate the economic value of DAO voting power. Protocols like Convex, Yearn, and Frax compete to accumulate veCRV tokens because directing CRV emissions to their preferred liquidity pools reduces their cost of liquidity. Convex alone controls over 50% of all veCRV, making it the most powerful governance participant. The voting power calculator helps protocols estimate the cost of acquiring sufficient veCRV to influence gauge weights and the resulting economic benefit from directed emissions.

🏥

Governance consulting firms and professional delegates use voting power analytics to advise DAO participants. Organizations like Gauntlet, a]16z Crypto, and individual professional delegates manage delegated tokens worth hundreds of millions of dollars. They use voting power calculators to assess quorum risk (whether enough tokens will vote to meet quorum), analyze voting coalitions, and model the impact of their vote on close proposals. This professional governance layer is increasingly important as DAOs manage more capital and make more consequential decisions.

Special Cases

The Curve Wars represent the most economically significant application of DAO voting power.

Curve Finance allows veCRV holders to vote on gauge weights, which determine how CRV emissions are distributed across liquidity pools. Higher emissions to a pool attract more liquidity, reducing trading costs and improving capital efficiency for the protocol that uses that pool. Protocols like Convex accumulate veCRV and sell their voting power through bribe platforms like Votium. At peak, veCRV bribes exceeded 30 million dollars per month, creating an entire economy around governance voting. The calculator models the economic value of gauge weight influence by computing the CRV emissions directed per veCRV committed. Optimism and Arbitrum introduced novel governance structures with two-house systems. Optimism has a Token House (OP token holders) and a Citizens House (non-transferable soulbound governance NFTs). The Token House votes on protocol upgrades and treasury allocation, while the Citizens House votes on retroactive public goods funding. This bifurcated structure means that pure token holdings do not give complete governance power. The calculator models both houses and shows the different types of proposals each can influence. Governance attacks are a real concern that the calculator helps evaluate. A hostile actor could acquire enough tokens to pass malicious proposals (draining the treasury, changing protocol parameters unfavorably). The calculator computes the cost of a governance attack: acquiring enough tokens to meet the proposal threshold and overcome expected opposition. For Uniswap, acquiring 40 million UNI (enough to single-handedly meet quorum) would cost approximately 300 million dollars at current prices, making a direct attack prohibitively expensive. However, flash loan governance attacks (borrowing tokens to vote within a single transaction) have been executed on smaller DAOs.

Major DAO Governance Parameters (2025)

DAOGovernance TokenProposal ThresholdQuorumVoting PeriodTimelock Delay
UniswapUNI2.5M UNI (0.25%)40M UNI (4%)7 days2 days
CompoundCOMP25K COMP (0.25%)400K COMP (4%)3 days2 days
AaveAAVE + stkAAVE80K AAVE320K AAVE (2%)3 days1 day
MakerDAOMKRVaries by typeVariesVaries2 days
ArbitrumARB5M ARB (0.05%)Variable 3-5%14-16 days3 days
ENSENS100K ENS (0.1%)1% of supply7 days2 days
CurveveCRV2500 veCRV15% of veCRV7 days3 days

Frequently Asked Questions

Q

What is the difference between token-weighted and quadratic voting?

A

Token-weighted voting gives one vote per token, meaning a holder with 1 million tokens has 1000x the power of someone with 1000 tokens. Quadratic voting uses the square root of committed tokens, so 1 million tokens gives 1000 votes while 1000 tokens gives about 31.6 votes, a ratio of roughly 31.6x instead of 1000x. Quadratic voting prevents plutocracy by reducing whale dominance.

Q

What is delegation and how does it work?

A

Delegation lets you assign your voting power to another address (a delegate) without transferring your tokens. You retain custody and can revoke delegation at any time. This is essential because most token holders do not actively participate in governance. By delegating to an informed, active participant, passive holders ensure their tokens contribute to governance decisions. Major protocols like Uniswap, ENS, and Compound support delegation.

Q

What is a governance quorum and why does it matter?

A

A quorum is the minimum number of votes required for a governance proposal to be valid. If a proposal passes with 99% approval but only 1% of tokens voted, it may not meet quorum and fails. Quorum thresholds vary: Uniswap requires 40 million UNI (4% of supply), Compound requires 400000 COMP (4%). Low turnout DAOs frequently fail to meet quorum, causing governance gridlock.

Q

What are vote-escrowed (ve) tokens?

A

Vote-escrowed tokens (pioneered by Curve as veCRV) require locking governance tokens for a set period to receive voting power. Longer locks give more power: 4-year lock gives maximum weight, 1-year lock gives one-quarter weight. The power decays linearly as the lock approaches expiration. This mechanism aligns incentives by ensuring that those with the most governance power are long-term committed holders.

Q

Can I be paid to vote or delegate in a DAO?

A

Yes, governance incentives are increasingly common. Some DAOs pay active delegates through retroactive grants. The Curve Wars ecosystem involves direct compensation: protocols pay voters (via bribes on platforms like Votium and Hidden Hand) to direct emissions to their preferred pools. A veCRV holder can earn 10-30% APR just from governance bribe payments. This creates a market for governance influence.

Q

How concentrated is governance power in typical DAOs?

A

Extremely concentrated. Research shows that in most DAOs, the top 10 delegates control 50-80% of active voting power. In Uniswap, the top 10 delegates control over 50% of all voting tokens. This concentration means that despite the decentralized label, a small number of entities (often venture capital firms, the founding team, and professional delegates) effectively control governance outcomes.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

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Pro Tip

If you want to maximize your governance influence without buying millions of tokens, become an active, trustworthy delegate. Write thoughtful governance posts, vote consistently with clear rationale, and engage with the community. Top delegates on Uniswap and ENS have accumulated millions of dollars worth of delegated voting power purely through reputation and engagement, giving them more governance influence than most whale token holders.

Did you know?

In 2023, the Arbitrum DAO had its first major governance crisis when the Arbitrum Foundation preemptively spent 50 million dollars from the treasury before the community had voted to authorize the spending. The resulting governance vote (AIP-1) became one of the most contentious in DAO history, with over 600 million ARB tokens voting. Despite overwhelming opposition (76% against), the foundation had already spent the funds, highlighting the tension between on-chain governance and real-world operational speed.

Regional Guides

United States
The SEC has scrutinized DAO governance tokens under securities law. The SEC enforcement action against the Lido DAO argued that liquid staking tokens are securities in part because the DAO governance structure constitutes a common enterprise. US-based DAO participants should be aware that governance participation could be cited as evidence of a common enterprise in securities litigation. Several DAOs have established legal wrappers (Wyoming DAO LLCs, Cayman foundations) to provide legal clarity for US participants.
European Union
MiCA (Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation) classifies some governance tokens as asset-referenced tokens or crypto-assets depending on their design. DAOs operating in the EU may need to comply with disclosure requirements. The EU Blockchain Observatory has published guidance noting that purely decentralized DAOs (with no identifiable legal entity) create regulatory challenges, as there is no entity to hold accountable for governance decisions.
Asia Pacific
Japan requires crypto exchanges to register governance tokens they list, and the Financial Services Agency has examined whether governance rights make tokens more like securities than utility tokens. Singapore MAS guidelines treat governance tokens as digital payment tokens unless they confer rights analogous to equity. In practice, many Asian DAOs operate through Singapore or BVI foundations to provide a legal entity for governance decisions.
📖Difficulty:Advanced
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For informational purposes only. This tool does not constitute financial advice. Consult a qualified financial adviser before making investment or financial decisions.
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