Coinbase says the first Fannie Mae-backed mortgage backed by Bitcoin has officially closed in the United States. This marks an important step towards the integration of crypto assets into mainstream home financing.
In one June 4 post, Coinbase said the mortgage was originated and serviced by Better using the Coinbase infrastructurethe national rollout is expected later this summer.
The announcement follows Coinbase and Better’s March unveiling of a crypto-backed mortgage program. It is designed to allow borrowers to use Bitcoin or USDC holdings as collateral while retaining exposure to their digital assets.
How the mortgage structure works
The product does not include buying houses directly with Bitcoin.
Instead, borrowers pledge crypto assets as collateral for a separate loan used to finance the mortgage down payment.
Under the structure Coinbase outlined in March:
- borrowers receive a standard Fannie Mae mortgage on the home,
- plus a second collateral loan tied to Bitcoin or USDC holdings.
The crypto collateral remains in escrow for the life of the loan and is repaid upon repayment of the obligation.
Coinbase previously said borrowers will have access to:
- And 30 years Fixed rate mortgage options through the program.
The company also stated that Bitcoin price volatility does not directly impact mortgage terms under Better’s structure.
Coinbase presents crypto as collateral for homes
Coinbase has framed the mortgage rollout as part of a broader effort to integrate digital assets into real-world financial infrastructure.
The company argued that many crypto holders previously faced a difficult choice when purchasing homes.
By allowing borrowers to pledge digital assets instead of liquidating them entirely, Coinbase said crypto-backed mortgages could increase access to homeownership while maintaining long-term investment exposure.
The Fannie Mae link gives the launch institutional weight
One of the most notable parts of the rollout is the involvement of Fannie Mae-backed conforming mortgage structures.
That connection takes the product beyond a niche crypto lending experiment. It ties it directly to the regulated U.S. housing finance infrastructure.
Coinbase described the mortgages as “compliant” products that benefit from the same Fannie Mae backing used in traditional mortgage markets.
Home finance may now become another important category where digital assets interact more directly with regulated financial systems.
Risks and unanswered questions remain
Despite this milestone, the model still poses significant risks and open questions.
Crypto prices remain highly volatile and the structure is highly dependent on collateral management requirements. Coinbase previously said that Bitcoin-backed down payment loans will require collateral at the very least 250% of the loan amount.
Questions also remain:
- long-term regulatory treatment,
- stress scenarios on the housing market,
- borrower protection,
- and how scalable crypto-backed mortgage underwriting can become over time.
The nationwide rollout later this summer could provide a clearer picture of whether demand for the product extends beyond early crypto-native adopters.
Final summary
- Coinbase said the first Fannie Mae-backed mortgage funded with Bitcoin collateral has officially closed in the United States.
- The crypto-backed mortgage structure allows borrowers to commit Bitcoin or USDC for down payment financing while retaining exposure to their digital assets.
