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Home » Coinbase and Better Fund First Fannie Mae-Backed Bitcoin Mortgage
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Coinbase and Better Fund First Fannie Mae-Backed Bitcoin Mortgage

June 5, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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Coinbase and Better Fund First Fannie Mae-Backed Bitcoin Mortgage
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A married couple in Ann Arbor, Michigan, just made history — not by winning the lottery or inheriting a fortune, but by buying a home using Bitcoin as collateral. Their transaction, quietly closed on June 4, marks the first time a government-sponsored enterprise has backed a conforming mortgage structured around digital assets, and it may well represent the beginning of a fundamental shift in how Americans unlock wealth to purchase homes.

The loan was funded through a partnership between mortgage lender Better Home & Finance Holding Company (NASDAQ: BETR) and crypto exchange Coinbase (NASDAQ: COIN). Joe, a software engineer, and Amy, a graduate student, used their Bitcoin holdings as collateral to purchase their first home while avoiding capital gains taxes and maintaining their cryptocurrency position. For Joe, the decision was straightforward: after years of accumulating Bitcoin, selling it to fund a down payment was never really on the table.

“Buying our first home has always been the goal, but I wasn’t willing to give up a decade of investing to get there,” he said in a statement. “We closed on our home and my Bitcoin stayed intact.”

How the Product Actually Works

The mechanics of the loan are more nuanced than the headline suggests. Borrowers receive a standard mortgage plus a second lien tied to pledged crypto collateral. In practice, this means two loans close simultaneously: a conventional Fannie Mae-backed home mortgage, and a separate loan collateralized by the borrower’s digital assets held in custody at Coinbase Prime, the exchange’s institutional-grade storage arm.

The mortgage allows borrowers to pledge Bitcoin as collateral rather than selling their holdings to meet down payment requirements, and the structure enables borrowers to secure financing without liquidating their digital assets, avoiding a taxable sale and maintaining exposure to their long-term investment position.

The collateral requirements reflect the volatility of the underlying asset. Borrowers pledging Bitcoin must put up 250% coverage — meaning $250,000 in BTC for every $100,000 borrowed against it. For USDC, the ratio drops to 125%, reflecting the stablecoin’s peg to the dollar. Critically, ordinary market swings will not trigger margin calls. Liquidation of the crypto does not kick in until 60 days of delinquency, and upon full repayment, borrowers get their digital assets back.

The Regulatory Foundation

This product did not emerge in a vacuum. Its existence traces directly to a policy shift initiated over a year ago. On June 25, 2025, FHFA Director William Pulte issued a directive to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to prepare a proposal for consideration of cryptocurrency as an asset for reserves in their single-family mortgage loan risk assessments, without conversion of said cryptocurrency to U.S. dollars.

The directive reversed Fannie Mae’s longstanding guideline that had blocked digital assets from underwriting since 2022. Pulte framed the move as part of President Trump’s broader ambition to position the United States as the global center of the crypto economy.

The FHFA directed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to only include cryptocurrency assets that can be evidenced and stored on a U.S. regulated centralized exchange. That carve-out is significant: self-custodied Bitcoin, staked assets, and DeFi-locked positions do not qualify under current guidelines.

Better and Coinbase announced their partnership in March 2026, with the product designed to address the evolving financial profiles of modern homebuyers based on how they store wealth and how the mortgage system has traditionally evaluated it.

Coinbase and Better Fund First Fannie Mae-Backed Bitcoin Mortgage

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The Market Gap This Fills

The timing reflects a real and growing tension in the American housing market. Better said that 41% of its pre-approved customers meet income and credit requirements but lack sufficient cash for a conventional down payment. According to the National Association of Realtors, the median age of a first-time homebuyer has reached a record 40 years old, up from 32 a decade earlier, reflecting the impact of elevated mortgage rates, rising home prices, and limited housing inventory. 

Better CEO Vishal Garg has pointed to a generational mismatch at the heart of the problem. The company cited changing household balance sheets and the growing role of digital assets in personal wealth accumulation as reasons for developing the product.

Coinbase’s Head of Consumer and Platform Partnerships, Mark Troianovski, put it more directly: “Tens of millions of Americans have built real wealth in digital assets,” he said, framing the launch as a structural bridge between that wealth and homeownership.

Coinbase and Better Fund First Fannie Mae-Backed Bitcoin MortgageCoinbase and Better Fund First Fannie Mae-Backed Bitcoin Mortgage

Coinbase and Better Fund First Fannie Mae-Backed Bitcoin Mortgage

What Comes Next

Better and Coinbase confirmed plans to make the product available to qualified borrowers nationwide by summer 2026, initially supporting Bitcoin and USDC, with plans to expand support to additional digital assets as the market matures.

If adoption gains traction, token-backed mortgages could open a new source of purchasing power for prospective homeowners while creating a bridge between digital asset wealth and traditional homeownership. The nationwide rollout planned for summer 2026 will provide the first large-scale test of whether crypto-backed housing finance can become a meaningful component of the U.S. mortgage market.

Risks remain real. Bitcoin has historically fallen more than 70% in bear markets, and a sustained downturn could stress the collateral buffers underpinning these second-lien structures. Still, for now, the milestone stands: a government-sponsored enterprise has formally accepted Bitcoin as the foundation of an American home purchase. Whether this is a novelty or a new normal will depend on what comes next.

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