Homebuyers can now borrow against their Bitcoin holdings to secure a mortgage without selling their BTC or facing forced liquidation, according to a new product backed by Coinbase and mortgage lender Better that qualifies for Fannie Mae purchase.
Coinbase and Better Launch Bitcoin-Backed Mortgage Product
The new offering allows borrowers to pledge Bitcoin as collateral for a fiat-denominated home loan, preserving their crypto position while accessing traditional mortgage financing. Fannie Mae has accepted the product, making it eligible for purchase on the secondary mortgage market, a first for any crypto-collateralized loan.
Coinbase and Better are jointly enabling the program, which also supports USDC as collateral. Borrowers lock their BTC in custody rather than liquidating it, keeping exposure to any future price appreciation while funding a home purchase.
The Fannie Mae eligibility is the critical detail. It means these loans can be securitized and sold alongside conventional mortgages, giving lenders confidence to offer them at competitive rates. Without that secondary market access, crypto-backed mortgages would carry higher costs and remain a niche product.
How the No-Liquidation Claim Works
Traditional crypto-backed loans from platforms like Aave or centralized lenders carry automatic liquidation triggers. If BTC drops below a loan-to-value threshold, the collateral is sold to cover the debt, often at the worst possible time for the borrower.
This product’s headline claim is the elimination of that liquidation risk. The structure differs from DeFi lending because it operates within the regulated mortgage framework. The Fannie Mae backing suggests built-in buffers or LTV caps that absorb price volatility without forcing collateral sales, though full mechanical details of how sharp BTC drawdowns are handled have not been publicly disclosed.
For long-term Bitcoin holders who have resisted selling through multiple cycles, this creates a path to real-world utility from their holdings without triggering a taxable event. The tax advantage alone could be significant for holders sitting on large unrealized gains.
Why This Matters for BTC Holders Now
The product arrives as Bitcoin continues to attract institutional infrastructure. The broader trend of BTC being treated as a balance-sheet asset by sovereign entities and corporations has accelerated demand for collateral-based financial products that keep holders long.
Coinbase’s involvement signals that major crypto exchanges are moving beyond trading into structured finance. The partnership with Fannie Mae bridges the gap between crypto custody and the traditional mortgage pipeline, a connection that did not exist at this scale before.
Key details still to watch: specific LTV ratios, whether the BTC earns any yield while locked as collateral, and how the product handles margin requirements during periods of extreme volatility. Early adoption numbers and broader market reaction in the coming weeks will determine whether this becomes a template for other crypto-collateral mortgage products.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.



