Sunday, June 7, 2026
30.1 C
New York

The Crypto-Based Mortgage Is Now a Reality


Coinbase and the home lender Better are rolling out crypto-based mortgages—and have already completed the first one.

According to Yahoo Finance, the mortgages are backed by Fannie Mae, the government-sponsored enterprise that supports liquidity in the U.S. housing finance system. The structure follows Fannie Mae guidance allowing bitcoin and U.S. dollar-pegged stablecoins to be used as collateral for certain home loans. Coinbase says there is a waiting list of interested applicants.

Pledging Crypto Without Giving It Up

Although the first mortgage has been issued, Better and Coinbase said the product will officially launch on June 18. The program was announced in March and combines a traditional Fannie Mae-eligible mortgage with a separate privately financed loan secured by digital assets. The first mortgage is underwritten and priced like a standard conforming loan, while the crypto-backed loan is used to fund the down payment.

Previously, using bitcoin as down payment collateral or for full mortgage financing has been limited to niche offerings from a small number of specialized lenders. The new structure allows borrowers to pledge crypto as collateral rather than liquidate it, allowing them to retain ownership of their holdings while accessing home financing.

“This is a meaningful step toward turning crypto wealth into usable collateral,” said Joel Hugentobler, Cryptocurrency Analyst at Javelin Strategy & Research. “It will probably be most popular with a younger, crypto-native consumer who doesn’t want to liquidate their holdings. Coinbase and Better being serious about this while conforming to conventional Fannie Mae requirements points to digital assets becoming increasingly used and treated as a balance sheet item rather than a speculative asset.”

Collateral Requirements

Although the loans are separate, Better combines them into a single monthly payments with one interest rate and term. When bitcoin is used as collateral, its value must be at least 250% of the down payment loan amount. For stablecoins, the requirement is 125%.

Better describes the structure as aligned with how some borrowers already hold wealth in digital assets, while integrating it into conventional mortgage underwriting.

“Americans used to keep all their money in banks,” Vishal Garg, Founder and CEO of Better, told Yahoo Finance. “Now, American households have $35 trillion in stocks, bonds, and digital assets, and only $5 trillion deposited in their checking or savings accounts in a bank. Young people are investing in digital assets. They’re not keeping their money in cash.”



Source link

Hot this week

Grant puts gloss on paint recycling enterprise

A Cambridgeshire social enterprise is awarded £400,000 by...

Bitcoin (BTC), Ether (ETH) suffer worst weekly drop since FTX crash

Crypto investors endured one of their toughest week...

It’s time to buy the dip on this struggling fast casual stock, says JPMorgan

There's an attractive buying opportunity in shares of...

Public Sector Procurement Shift: Adyen Unseats Stripe in Major UK Government Fintech Win

In a major reshuffle of the UK’s public...

Is the Housing Market Going to Crash?

Key takeaways Economists are confident that the housing market...

Latest Post

JPMorgan drops sell rating on Tesla after years

JPMorgan on Friday lifted its sell rating on...

Larry Kudlow: The stock market is ‘killing it’

FOX Business host Larry Kudlow says the stock market...

Broadway record ticket sales show consumers splurging on experiences

Daniel Radcliffe takes a bow onstage during curtain...

Report: New EU Regulations Will Require Banks To Disclose Bitcoin Holdings

Trusted Editorial content, reviewed by leading industry experts...

Caregivers and disabled workers are missing out on key financial benefits

ShareShare Article via FacebookShare Article via TwitterShare Article...
Demo

Related Articles

Popular Categories

Demo