The vault market is still green — and tracking it is the proof
Hyperliquid shows your stake inside each vault — but there's no native panel that aggregates all your vault deposits into one view. That tracking gap is a sign of how young the market is. Here's an honest map of the third-party trackers that help today, and how to use them safely.
Hyperliquid's vaults are barely two years old, and nothing exposes how young the market is quite like trying to track your money in them. The app shows your stake inside each individual vault — open a vault page, see your share, your PnL on that one. But there is no native aggregated panel: no single screen that sums up all your vault deposits, their combined return, your real exposure, after fees, across the lot. If you're in three vaults, you're checking three pages and doing the arithmetic in your head.
Why this is a "green market" tell
In traditional finance, your broker hands you one consolidated portfolio view by default — it's table stakes. In a mature market, aggregation is solved and invisible. Here, it isn't: the ecosystem is new, and the tooling is still fragmented and fast-changing, a scatter of third-party dashboards each solving a slice of the problem and none of them canonical. That fragmentation isn't a scandal; it's just what an early market looks like before the infrastructure layer settles. But it does put more of the burden on you — which is exactly why this matters.
What actually helps today
I won't pretend any of these is a finished product, and I can't vouch for every one — but here's the honest map of what exists, by job. (Use them read-only: paste a public wallet address; never connect a wallet you don't have to, and never, ever enter a seed phrase — see what can go wrong.)
To screen and compare vaults — before you deposit:
- VaultVision — the most vault-specific of the bunch: risk scores, drawdown, and a useful overlay that normalizes 2–4 vaults' NAV side by side.
- ASXN — established Hyperliquid dashboards with vault and ecosystem stats.
- The vault leaderboard itself, read with the cautions from the income illusion and the survivors — and these reviews.
To track your own positions — after you deposit:
- HyperTracker and HypeStats — multi-wallet trackers that aggregate positions and PnL into one dashboard.
- Liquid Terminal — a broader Hyperliquid data platform (explorer, markets, ecosystem).
- Honest caveat: most of these lean toward perp position tracking; clean aggregation of vault deposits specifically — time-weighted, net of fees — is still the weakest spot in all of them.
For protocol-level numbers (HLP, fees, TVL): DefiLlama and ASXN.
For power users: everything is recomputable from Hyperliquid's public API — which is exactly what this blog runs on. We keep our own twice-daily snapshots so every figure in every review can be rebuilt from raw data (paper profits shows that lens at work). If you can write a little code, the API plus an open-source analyzer beats any dashboard, because you control the math.
The honest gaps
None of these fully solves the real question a depositor has: "across all my vaults, what's my blended, time-weighted return after fees, and what's my true risk?" They get pieces of it. They're young, they change, and a few will quietly disappear (that's the market being green again). So: cross-check anything important against the chain, prefer read-only tools, and don't mistake a pretty dashboard for verified truth — the data underneath is public, so it can be checked.
Where this is heading
Two things will close the gap. First, the tooling will consolidate, the way it always does as a market matures — expect a canonical aggregator eventually. Second, the structure itself can solve part of it: when you hold a single tokenized index of vaults instead of juggling ten deposits, your "portfolio" collapses into one position you can actually track. That's not a pitch — it's one of the honest reasons an index layer makes sense in a market this young. Until then, the tracking is on you, and the tools above are the best scaffolding I've found.
The bottom line
The hardest part of investing in Hyperliquid vaults right now isn't picking one — it's keeping track of the ones you picked, because the aggregated view doesn't exist natively yet. That's not a reason to avoid vaults; it's a reason to go in with the right tools, read-only and cross-checked, and with eyes open to how early this all still is.
Nothing here is financial advice, and none of the third-party tools above is an endorsement — verify before you trust. One trader showing his work.