Bitcoin-Backed Loans Are Unlocking Homeownership for an Entire New Generation

Bitcoin Magazine

For CJ Konstantinos, the case for Bitcoin-backed mortgages is personal. In 2019, he paid 100 Bitcoin for a house. That bitcoin is now worth roughly $7.6 million and he says he can’t sell his house for more than $500,000. 

At the time, it was the kind of transaction most people in traditional finance would have called reckless. Now, Konstantinos runs Peoples Reserve and speaks at the world’s largest Bitcoin conference to explain why doing it again — this time through structured bitcoin lending products — makes sense for a growing number of holders.

“Bitcoin found me and smacked me up the head,” Konstantinos said Wednesday during a panel titled “From HODL to Home: Bitcoin-Backed Loans Meet Mortgages” on the Nakamoto Stage at Bitcoin 2026 in Las Vegas. 

The session brought together executives from SALT Lending and Peoples Reserve to discuss a market they argue is at an inflection point: using Bitcoin as collateral to buy homes, without ever selling the asset.

The conversation covered hard financial mechanics, but it kept returning to something more fundamental. A home, Konstantinos said, is not just a real estate transaction. It is where you start a family. It is where you feel safe. That framing set the tone for a discussion that tied Bitcoin’s technical properties to one of the most human financial needs.

Bitcoin is making home ownership easier

Hunter Albright, chief revenue officer at SALT Lending, said the numbers in the housing market tell a stark story. It has become harder to buy a first home, he noted, pointing to data showing a growing share of first-time U.S. homebuyers are now over the age of 40. That kind of statistic is evidence that traditional mortgage finance is not working for a wide segment of the population.

At the same time, Albright said, a large pool of wealth sits in Bitcoin — idle, in the view of its holders, yet untapped as a financial tool. SALT, which is approaching a decade of Bitcoin-backed lending, has identified four use cases it sees in its customer base: access, for borrowers who need a bridge into traditional finance; advantage, the ability to move fast and close on a loan within roughly 24 hours; agility, the option to buy a new home before an existing property sells; and acceleration, using Bitcoin-backed credit to build wealth over time.

Konstantinos made the collateral case in terms of monetary history. Gold works as collateral, he said, but it is physical and hard to move. U.S. Treasuries are strong but carry inflation risk tied to an expanding supply. 

Bitcoin, he argued, takes the best of both: it is finite, it settles on chain, and it can move billions across the world without the friction of physical settlement. 

“You have a small group of men deciding what the price of money is,” he said of the current interest rate system. “You can’t finagle the current situation.” His argument was that Bitcoin collateral, by reducing lender risk, creates structural conditions for lower borrowing costs and, in turn, more accessible housing.

Albright reinforced that thesis from the lender side. Bitcoin, he said, “changes the game” for capital markets access. Because the collateral is strong and liquid, firms that lend against it can raise money at attractive rates and pass better terms to customers. 

SALT has also built technology that can swap Bitcoin collateral into stablecoins during volatile markets, which he framed as a mechanism for protecting both sides of the transaction.

Both panelists acknowledged that these products have historically served wealthier clients — what Konstantinos called “gold people,” old-money families, and traditional finance investors. But they said the next wave is broader. 

“Bitcoin solves my problem,” Konstantinos said, describing how a new class of users is coming to the market. Albright echoed that framing, saying Bitcoin is bringing strategies once available only to private banking clients down to anyone who holds the asset.

The panel also touched on a structural shift Albright sees in the broader economy: a move from labor-based income to asset-based income. In that world, the ability to borrow against what you own — without selling it — becomes less a luxury and more a financial foundation.

This post first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

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