Coinbase is partnering with Better Home & Finance to let homebuyers use crypto holdings as collateral for down payment loans, bringing digital assets into a part of the U.S. housing market that has traditionally relied on cash and cash equivalents. The program allows eligible borrowers to pledge Bitcoin or USDC held in their Coinbase accounts without selling those assets before closing on a home.
Under the structure described by the companies, the down payment loan will be separate from the primary mortgage on the property. Better will originate and service the mortgages, while the main home loan will remain within the conventional framework used for Fannie Mae-backed lending. The arrangement is designed to give buyers another funding option while keeping the mortgage itself within the current system.
The launch comes at a time when access to homeownership remains difficult for many buyers. Higher borrowing costs, elevated home prices, and limited housing supply have made it harder for first-time buyers to enter the market. Data from the National Association of Realtors shows the median age of first-time homebuyers has risen to 40, compared with 32 in 2000.
The product will allow a borrower to take out a loan against digital assets already held in a Coinbase account. Instead of selling Bitcoin or USDC to raise cash for a down payment, the customer can keep those holdings and use them as pledged collateral for the separate loan.
That structure may appeal to borrowers who want to maintain crypto exposure while moving forward with a home purchase. It also means customers may avoid triggering a taxable sale at the point of purchase, while still gaining access to funds needed for closing.
Coinbase said the mortgage itself will operate like a conventional home loan and will come with the same legal protections that apply in standard mortgage transactions. According to a company spokesperson, mortgage terms and interest rates will not change because of Bitcoin price swings once the loan is active.
The company also said there will be no margin calls if the value of the pledged crypto falls, as long as the borrower continues to make the required payments. Kara Calvert, Coinbase’s head of U.S. policy, told Reuters that the product is designed to operate within the safeguards of the existing mortgage system, including how volatility risk is treated.
The partnership also reflects a broader effort to connect digital assets with everyday financial use cases. Crypto has often been discussed in the context of trading, payments, or treasury strategies, but this offering ties it directly to home financing, one of the largest financial commitments for most households.
For buyers who hold part of their wealth in digital assets, the product offers a way to access that value without converting it into cash before a purchase. That may be relevant for customers whose assets sit outside traditional savings or brokerage accounts.
At the same time, the product introduces another layer of borrowing into an already expensive transaction. A homebuyer would be managing both a primary mortgage and a separate loan backed by crypto assets. The structure therefore adds leverage even though the mortgage remains within a standard lending framework.
The companies are entering this segment as policymakers in Washington have taken a more open approach toward crypto-related financial products. The Trump administration has backed efforts to expand access to alternative investments, including crypto, across the financial system.
Coinbase said it remains engaged with policymakers as crypto products move closer to mainstream finance. Calvert said the company maintains an active bipartisan dialogue in Washington and described the mortgage-linked offering as a product intended to widen access for Americans whose wealth is not held in traditional accounts.
Better will handle loan origination and servicing, placing the housing finance portion of the transaction within an established lending channel. That structure may be important as firms seek to connect crypto-based products with regulated consumer finance services.
The launch also comes at a time when the crypto industry continues to seek practical consumer applications beyond investment and speculation. By attaching Bitcoin and USDC holdings to a home purchase without requiring a sale, Coinbase and Better are testing whether digital assets can function as part of a mainstream borrowing model.
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