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Is crypto ready for prime time in housing finance? Rate thinks so

· 5 min read
Is crypto ready for prime time in housing finance? Rate thinks so

Mortgage lender Rate has launched RateFi, a nationwide non-QM mortgage program that allows qualified borrowers to use verified cryptocurrency holdings for mortgage qualification without liquidating their digital assets.

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Mortgage lender Rate is stepping further into digital asset territory with the launch of RateFi, a nationwide mortgage product that allows borrowers to use verified cryptocurrency holdings toward mortgage qualification without liquidating those assets.

The Chicago-based lender announced Tuesday that RateFi is fully operational within its digital mortgage platform and available under its non-QM (non-qualified mortgage) guidelines.

The move reflects a broader shift in financial services as lenders experiment with integrating digital assets into traditional underwriting while remaining within established compliance frameworks.

How RateFi works

Under the program, qualified borrowers can use verified cryptocurrency as reserves and, in some cases, as qualifying income. Down payments and closing costs must still be paid in U.S. dollars, though borrowers may convert crypto to meet those requirements.

Rate said the program includes standard anti-money-laundering and know-your-customer checks. It operates within the company’s existing non-QM infrastructure rather than through conforming channels backed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, which do not currently provide broad guidance allowing cryptocurrency to count as qualifying income in standard agency loans.

“Digital assets are real assets, yet mortgage lending has treated them as invisible,” Kate Amor, EVP and head of enterprise products at Rate, said in a statement. “RateFi changes that. We built this product to apply common-sense underwriting to a modern financial reality, allowing qualified borrowers to use their crypto without selling it, without gimmicks, and without stepping outside established lending standards.”

Amor continued that RateFi represents the first phase of a broader digital asset lending strategy that the company plans to expand over time.

Rate President Shant Banosian emphasized that the product runs within Rate’s existing underwriting and pricing systems rather than creating a separate crypto lending channel.

“Crypto lending gets a lot of headlines,” said Banosian. “But this business is about closing loans consistently, compliantly and at scale.”

A response to growing crypto wealth

Industry research cited by Rate suggests more than 10 percent of Americans hold digital assets, with some maintaining six- and seven-figure portfolios. As digital wealth grows, lenders are beginning to adapt to borrowers who may prefer not to liquidate long-term holdings to qualify for a mortgage.

Historically, most lenders have required borrowers to convert cryptocurrency into cash before it can be counted toward mortgage qualification. That process can trigger capital gains taxes, lock in losses during market downturns or reduce exposure to assets borrowers believe will appreciate.

RateFi seeks to reduce that friction by recognizing verified digital holdings as part of a borrower’s financial profile without requiring full liquidation.

The product is not entirely without precedent. Other lenders, including Newrez, have introduced programs that allow cryptocurrency to factor into qualification, though most remain limited to non-QM or portfolio channels rather than conforming agency loans.

Why non-QM matters

The non-QM designation is key.

Because government-sponsored enterprises do not broadly recognize crypto as qualifying income, lenders offering these programs must operate outside conforming guidelines. Non-QM loans allow more flexible underwriting but are typically funded through private capital markets rather than sold to the GSEs.

That structure limits scale compared to agency lending, but it also provides a testing ground for innovation.

For Rate, the strategy appears incremental rather than disruptive.

Borrowers still make down payments in dollars. Loans are underwritten using traditional risk frameworks. Crypto is treated primarily as reserves or supplemental income, not as a new payment rail.

Why lenders are cautious about stablecoins

RateFi’s eligibility includes certain stablecoins, which are digital assets designed to maintain a 1:1 value with the U.S. dollar. Stablecoins such as USDC or USDT aim to reduce volatility compared to assets like Bitcoin or Ethereum.

Even so, lenders remain cautious.

Stablecoins can “de-peg” during periods of market stress. Liquidity depends on issuer reserves and the mechanisms for redeeming tokens, and exchanges can halt withdrawals. Regulatory oversight of digital assets continues to evolve at both the federal and state levels.

Mortgage underwriting also requires clear documentation of the source of funds and asset seasoning. Blockchain-based holdings may introduce additional verification steps, including confirming wallet ownership, validating exchange accounts and reviewing transaction history.

Those realities help explain why programs like RateFi require that funds for down payments and closing costs be converted into U.S. dollars before settlement.

What this means for agents and brokers

For now, RateFi appears to target a specific borrower segment: crypto-heavy, self-employed or nontraditional applicants who may not fit neatly within agency underwriting boxes.

But the symbolic significance may be larger.

As digital assets move deeper into mainstream finance — and as younger, crypto-forward buyers age into peak homebuying years — lenders face increasing pressure to modernize balance sheet analysis that was built around W-2 income and brokerage statements.

The larger strategic question is whether products like RateFi remain niche offerings within non-QM channels or represent early steps toward broader normalization of digital assets in housing finance.

Meaningful expansion would likely require clearer guidance from federal regulators or eventual recognition by the GSEs. Until then, crypto-recognition programs will remain largely within portfolio and private-market structures.

For agents and brokers, the immediate impact may be limited but noteworthy. 

Buyers with significant digital holdings may have more options to qualify without restructuring their portfolios. At the same time, these loans remain specialized and subject to stricter documentation and pricing dynamics than conventional mortgages.

For Rate, the bet is that a growing cohort of borrowers wants to build real estate wealth without exiting digital asset positions, and that providing a compliant bridge between those two worlds creates both competitive differentiation and new loan volume.

Email Nick Pipitone

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