A new mortgage product backed by Fannie Mae will allow homebuyers to use Bitcoin or USDC as collateral for their down payment, creating the first federally supported crypto-backed home loan in the United States. The product, developed by two fintech firms and a large national mortgage lender, is expected to be available nationwide by the summer for qualified applicants.
How the new mortgage works
The structure relies on two loans that close at the same time. The first is a standard conforming Fannie Mae mortgage. The second is a separate loan that covers the down payment and is secured by the borrower’s digital assets.
Although technically distinct, the loans are bundled for the borrower as a single obligation, with one interest rate and one monthly payment. Both 15-year and 30-year fixed-rate terms are available, and total loan size must remain within Fannie Mae’s regional limits.
In the lender’s example, a buyer of a $500,000 home takes out a $400,000 primary mortgage and a $100,000 down payment loan. To secure that $100,000 down payment loan, the borrower would pledge roughly $250,000 in Bitcoin. That implies a 2.5-to-1 loan-to-collateral ratio for Bitcoin-backed credit. USDC-backed loans carry a lower 1.25-to-1 ratio, reflecting the stablecoin’s price stability compared with the more volatile cryptocurrency.
The pledged crypto is held in custody by one of the partnering financial platforms for the life of the loan, and cannot be traded or withdrawn. The structure has been designed to avoid margin calls driven solely by crypto price swings, as long as the borrower remains current on payments, in an effort to ring-fence the housing loan from day-to-day market volatility.
First deal closes in Michigan
The first mortgage under the new framework has already closed for a couple in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Rather than selling their Bitcoin, the buyers pledged their holdings to secure a conforming Fannie Mae loan and fund the down payment on their first home.
The product allows borrowers to retain ownership of their Bitcoin or USDC while unlocking liquidity for a home purchase. Additional digital assets may be added later, depending on adoption and regulatory comfort.
Demand signals and early user profile
Pre-launch demand has been described as strong. According to the mortgage company behind the program, the waitlist already represents about $250 million in potential mortgage volume. More than half of those on the list say they plan to buy a home within six months.
Internal data from the firm show that 76% of waitlisted users already have accounts with one of the participating crypto platforms. Early interest is concentrated in California, New York, and Florida, which currently lead all U.S. states in sign-ups.
The lender, which has originated more than $110 billion in home loans historically, said its analysis indicates that about 41% of pre-approved borrowers meet income and credit criteria but lack enough cash for a traditional down payment. The crypto-collateral mortgage is designed to address that shortfall by turning existing digital asset holdings into usable collateral without requiring a sale.
Link between housing and digital assets
This product creates a direct, formal channel between the multi-trillion dollar U.S. housing market and the digital asset sector. It offers a way for asset holders to finance what is often their largest purchase without triggering a taxable event from selling appreciated crypto, a key obstacle in past cycles.
The structure relies on significant over-collateralization, especially for Bitcoin, to limit risk. The 2.5-to-1 ratio for Bitcoin and the absence of routine margin calls while payments are current signal a cautious approach by traditional finance to the asset’s volatility. For USDC, the lower collateral requirement reflects the stablecoin’s track record of price stability and its roughly $75.95 billion market capitalization, which reinforces its role as a core piece of the digital currency infrastructure.
Launch timing amid crypto and housing headwinds
The rollout comes as both crypto and housing markets show signs of strain.
Bitcoin recently extended a five-session losing streak, dropping to around $63,029 on June 4, 2026, its lowest level since February. A prior move down toward $60,000 helped trigger roughly $1.76 billion in liquidations across the wider crypto market, underscoring bearish short-term sentiment and the asset’s familiar volatility profile.
The broader national housing market has been described as stuck in a “holding pattern.” A recent May report placed the typical U.S. home value at about $368,720, only slightly higher than a year earlier, while home sales fell 2.9% year over year. Affordability pressures and elevated financing costs continue to limit activity for many would-be buyers.
What traders will watch next
For digital asset traders, the early months of this program will serve as a real-world test of whether crypto-collateralized mortgages can move beyond a niche offering. The pace at which the reported $250 million in potential loans converts into closed transactions and locked collateral will be watched as a first proxy for genuine demand.
One potential shift is time horizon. In contrast to typical trading or even medium-term holding strategies, assets pledged into a 15- or 30-year mortgage structure could be tied up for much longer periods. If adoption builds, this could represent a new, more durable demand base for Bitcoin and USDC, linking their fortunes more closely to the long-cycle dynamics of the U.S. housing market.
Want to leverage your crypto for real-world opportunities? Learn how digital assets matter in modern finance.
Disclaimer: The content on this page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not represent the views or financial advice of Toobit. We make no guarantees regarding the accuracy or completeness of this information and shall not be held liable for any errors, omissions, or outcomes resulting from its use. Investing in digital assets involves risk; users should independently evaluate their financial situation and the risks involved. For further details, please consult our Terms of Service and Risk Disclosure.

