Coinbase Powers the First Crypto-Backed Conforming Mortgages — Bitcoin Now Buys Your Home
In a watershed moment for digital assets and mainstream finance, Coinbase and Better Home & Finance have launched the first Fannie Mae–backed mortgages that accept Bitcoin and USDC as down payment collateral — unlocking homeownership for 52 million American crypto holders without forcing a single sale.
For years, crypto holders faced an uncomfortable paradox: sit on life-changing digital wealth while struggling to scrape together a traditional down payment for a home — or sell assets, trigger capital gains taxes, and permanently exit positions they’d spent years building. On March 26, 2026, that paradox officially ended.
Coinbase (NASDAQ: COIN) and Better Home & Finance Holding Company (NASDAQ: BETR) announced a landmark partnership today: the first token-backed, conforming mortgages in U.S. history. Qualified borrowers can now pledge Bitcoin (BTC) or USDC held in their Coinbase accounts as collateral to fund their cash down payment — securing a standard Fannie Mae–backed conforming mortgage without liquidating a single satoshi.
“People who are sitting on Bitcoin or USDC can put a roof over their head without needing to sell it, without needing to incur capital gains.”
— Mark Troianovski, Head of Consumer & Platform Business Development, CoinbaseWhat Exactly Is a Token-Backed Conforming Mortgage?
The structure is elegantly simple, yet historically significant. A borrower who qualifies under Better’s standard mortgage underwriting criteria can pledge Bitcoin or USDC instead of bringing a traditional cash down payment to closing. That crypto pledge backs a separate, privately financed loan used to fund the down payment. The first-lien mortgage itself remains a fully conforming Fannie Mae loan — carrying identical protections, standards, and regulatory treatment as any conventional mortgage.
Critically, both the down payment loan and the primary mortgage share the same interest rate and amortization term, meaning borrowers manage a single unified monthly payment rather than juggling two separate obligations. This unified payment structure is described by the companies as a true market first in the conforming mortgage segment.
Borrowers apply through Better’s AI-native Tinman® platform and qualify under standard Fannie Mae conforming mortgage criteria.
Borrowers transfer BTC or USDC from their Coinbase account into a custody wallet with Better (held in a Coinbase Prime account), retaining ownership rights throughout.
The pledged digital assets collateralize a privately financed loan that funds the cash down payment — no sale, no taxable event.
The first-lien mortgage is a fully Fannie Mae–eligible conforming loan with a single unified monthly payment covering both loans.
The pledged crypto remains in custody for the life of the down payment loan and is returned to the borrower once that loan is fully repaid.
Fannie Mae’s Historic Green Light
The involvement of Fannie Mae — the $4 trillion government-sponsored enterprise that sets standards for the majority of the U.S. mortgage market — is the headline here. For the first time in its history, Fannie Mae is accepting mortgages collateralized by cryptocurrency. By aligning Bitcoin and USDC with conforming loan structures, this partnership positions digital assets as part of mainstream financial infrastructure rather than an experimental parallel system.
Token-backed mortgages originated by Better are designed in accordance with Fannie Mae guidelines and remain structurally identical to other conforming mortgages. This Fannie Mae alignment also enables interest rates far lower than those historically associated with standalone crypto-backed loans — which typically carried steep premiums reflecting their niche, uninsured nature.
“Better was founded to make homeownership more accessible for all Americans, and this partnership with Coinbase introduces a new pathway to realizing the American Dream for the 52 million Americans who own digital assets.”
— Vishal Garg, CEO & Founder, Better Home & FinanceKey Borrower Protections
Perhaps the most significant departure from previous crypto-backed lending products is the elimination of margin calls. In typical crypto-backed loan structures, a sharp decline in collateral value triggers margin calls — forcing borrowers to post additional collateral or face immediate liquidation. This product does none of that.
No Margin Calls
If BTC drops in value, mortgage terms remain entirely unchanged. Market movements alone never trigger liquidation.
No Taxable Event
Borrowers pledge — not sell — their assets. No capital gains taxes, no early withdrawal penalties triggered at closing.
USDC Earns Rewards
Borrowers pledging USDC continue earning yield on holdings, potentially offsetting mortgage payments and reducing the net effective rate.
Ownership Retained
Crypto is custodied in a Better/Coinbase Prime wallet but ownership rights remain with the borrower throughout.
Fannie Mae Protections
As a conforming loan, borrowers benefit from the same legal protections and standards as any conventional mortgage.
Coinbase One Rebate
Coinbase One members who close through Better are eligible for a rebate of 1% of the mortgage value, capped at $10,000 toward closing costs.
Collateral is only at risk of liquidation in the event of a 60-day mortgage payment delinquency — precisely mirroring the treatment of defaulted conventional mortgages. The product is designed, in Coinbase’s own words, to “work within the safeguards of the existing mortgage system, including how risk like asset volatility is managed.”
A Worked Example
The Rate Premium: What Borrowers Should Know
The product is not free. Coinbase has confirmed that crypto-backed mortgages will carry rates 0.5 to 1.5 percentage points higher than a standard 30-year conforming loan, depending on borrower profile. That said, this premium is substantially lower than rates historically associated with crypto-backed loans, which often carried 3–5% premiums or more, and the product is designed to function at near-conforming pricing rather than niche wealth management pricing.
For borrowers who believe in the long-term appreciation of Bitcoin — or who hold USDC and can offset mortgage costs with yield rewards — the calculus may clearly favor pledging over selling. The break-even point depends heavily on individual tax situations, expected BTC appreciation, and current conforming rates.
The Generational Wealth Angle
The companies frame this as a generational solution. Coinbase data shows that 45% of younger investors own crypto, compared with 18% of older cohorts — suggesting digital assets are becoming a primary store of value for a new generation that has simultaneously struggled the most with housing affordability. The median age of first-time homebuyers has risen to 40, versus 32 in 2000, per the National Association of Realtors.
“Token-backed mortgages are a major first step to unlocking homeownership for the younger generations that have struggled with barriers to saving for a traditional down payment.”
— Max Branzburg, Head of Consumer & Business Products, CoinbaseAccording to Better, roughly 41% of American families fail to purchase homes due to insufficient liquid cash — even when they hold other forms of wealth. With 52 million American adults now owning digital assets, this product directly targets that gap. Redfin data cited in the launch shows 12.7% of Gen Z and Millennial homebuyers have already sold crypto to fund a down payment, compared to 3.5% of Gen X and just 0.5% of Baby Boomers — underscoring both the latent demand and the tax friction this product resolves.
Regulatory Tailwinds and What Comes Next
The launch coincides with a notably crypto-friendly regulatory environment under the Trump administration, which has taken active steps to ease regulatory hurdles constraining the expansion of digital assets into traditional financial products. The Coinbase-Better partnership is an early beneficiary of this shift.
Both companies have also signaled aggressive expansion of eligible collateral types over time, potentially including tokenized equities, fixed income instruments, and tokenized real estate assets — pending market and regulatory conditions. This positions the product as a foundation for a much broader bridge between onchain capital and the traditional mortgage market.
Interested borrowers can register for early access today at better.com/crypto-backed-mortgages.
CCS Take: This Is a Watershed Moment
We’ve covered blockchain’s intersection with real estate since 2014 — from early NFT deed experiments to DeFi lending. But this is categorically different. When Fannie Mae — the entity that backstops roughly half of all U.S. mortgage origination — formally accepts Bitcoin as mortgage collateral, digital assets have crossed an institutional Rubicon.
The absence of margin calls is the product detail that deserves the most attention. Previous crypto-backed lending models essentially invited volatility-driven liquidations that wiped out borrowers during crypto winters. This structure deliberately immunizes borrowers from that risk while keeping them in their homes under the same protections as any conventional mortgage holder.
For the 52 million Americans who hold crypto and the millions more who will enter the asset class in the years ahead, this is the answer to the question they’ve been asking: can my digital wealth build a real one? As of today, the answer is yes.
