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Trump administration launches token-backed mortgages to normalize bitcoin in home purchases

Trump administration launches token-backed mortgages to normalize bitcoin in home purchases

A partnership between Better Home & Finance and Coinbase created the first conforming mortgage that lets borrowers pledge BTC or USDC as collateral, backed by Fannie Mae.

For decades, buying a house meant scraping together a down payment from a savings account, maybe liquidating some stocks, and enduring a small mountain of paperwork. Now the Trump administration wants to add a new option to that list: pledging your Bitcoin.

On March 26, 2026, Better Home & Finance and Coinbase launched the first token-backed conforming mortgage, allowing borrowers to use BTC or USDC as collateral for home loans. The product carries Fannie Mae backing, which means it isn’t some fringe DeFi experiment. It’s a government-sponsored enterprise putting its stamp on crypto-collateralized lending.

How the token-backed mortgage actually works

The mortgage structure pairs a standard first-lien loan with a second-lien loan backed by pledged crypto assets.

Borrowers can tap their verified crypto holdings to cover down payments and closing costs. The key selling point: they don’t have to sell their Bitcoin to do it, sidestepping the capital gains tax hit that would come from cashing out.

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There’s an important caveat. All actual payments, including down payments and closing costs, must still be denominated in US dollars. Instead, digital assets serve as reserves in the mortgage assessment, essentially proving to lenders that the borrower has the financial backing to support the loan.

The policy pipeline that made this possible

On June 25, 2025, Federal Housing Finance Agency Director Bill Pulte issued Decision No. 2025-360, directing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to explore integrating digital assets into mortgage risk assessments. That directive set the regulatory groundwork for what launched nine months later.

The move fits neatly into President Trump’s broader ambition to position the US as what he has called the “crypto capital of the world.”

Approximately 52 million Americans hold some form of digital assets. That’s a massive pool of potential homebuyers who, until now, couldn’t leverage their crypto wealth through traditional mortgage channels without first converting it to fiat.

What this means for investors

For Bitcoin holders, the immediate benefit is straightforward. Your BTC now has utility beyond speculation and store-of-value narratives. It can help you buy a house without triggering a taxable event.

The risk side of the equation deserves honest attention. Crypto collateral introduces volatility that traditional mortgage underwriting has never had to price. If Bitcoin drops 30% in a month, a borrower’s collateral cushion evaporates fast. How Fannie Mae handles margin-call-style scenarios on second-lien crypto loans is something investors and homebuyers alike should watch closely.

USDC stands to benefit in a particularly interesting way. A stablecoin being accepted as mortgage collateral by a government-backed entity is a strong endorsement of the stablecoin model itself. Circle, the issuer of USDC, finds itself in an increasingly privileged position if this trend continues.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

Trump administration launches token-backed mortgages to normalize bitcoin in home purchases

Trump administration launches token-backed mortgages to normalize bitcoin in home purchases

A partnership between Better Home & Finance and Coinbase created the first conforming mortgage that lets borrowers pledge BTC or USDC as collateral, backed by Fannie Mae.

For decades, buying a house meant scraping together a down payment from a savings account, maybe liquidating some stocks, and enduring a small mountain of paperwork. Now the Trump administration wants to add a new option to that list: pledging your Bitcoin.

On March 26, 2026, Better Home & Finance and Coinbase launched the first token-backed conforming mortgage, allowing borrowers to use BTC or USDC as collateral for home loans. The product carries Fannie Mae backing, which means it isn’t some fringe DeFi experiment. It’s a government-sponsored enterprise putting its stamp on crypto-collateralized lending.

How the token-backed mortgage actually works

The mortgage structure pairs a standard first-lien loan with a second-lien loan backed by pledged crypto assets.

Borrowers can tap their verified crypto holdings to cover down payments and closing costs. The key selling point: they don’t have to sell their Bitcoin to do it, sidestepping the capital gains tax hit that would come from cashing out.

Advertisement

There’s an important caveat. All actual payments, including down payments and closing costs, must still be denominated in US dollars. Instead, digital assets serve as reserves in the mortgage assessment, essentially proving to lenders that the borrower has the financial backing to support the loan.

The policy pipeline that made this possible

On June 25, 2025, Federal Housing Finance Agency Director Bill Pulte issued Decision No. 2025-360, directing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to explore integrating digital assets into mortgage risk assessments. That directive set the regulatory groundwork for what launched nine months later.

The move fits neatly into President Trump’s broader ambition to position the US as what he has called the “crypto capital of the world.”

Approximately 52 million Americans hold some form of digital assets. That’s a massive pool of potential homebuyers who, until now, couldn’t leverage their crypto wealth through traditional mortgage channels without first converting it to fiat.

What this means for investors

For Bitcoin holders, the immediate benefit is straightforward. Your BTC now has utility beyond speculation and store-of-value narratives. It can help you buy a house without triggering a taxable event.

The risk side of the equation deserves honest attention. Crypto collateral introduces volatility that traditional mortgage underwriting has never had to price. If Bitcoin drops 30% in a month, a borrower’s collateral cushion evaporates fast. How Fannie Mae handles margin-call-style scenarios on second-lien crypto loans is something investors and homebuyers alike should watch closely.

USDC stands to benefit in a particularly interesting way. A stablecoin being accepted as mortgage collateral by a government-backed entity is a strong endorsement of the stablecoin model itself. Circle, the issuer of USDC, finds itself in an increasingly privileged position if this trend continues.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.