I'm digging into using Bitcoin as collateral to access cash instead of selling it, which would hit me with around a 30% capital gains tax.
Here's the situation:
I own some Bitcoin and need cash for about 4 to 6 weeks.
Instead of selling my BTC (which would be a taxable event), I'm thinking about borrowing against it (a non-taxable collateral loan).
Then I can pay back the loan from my income.
I've heard of a few platforms:
Aave
Compound
MakerDAO
Wallet of Satoshi
Now, I'm wondering:
Are there any other platforms that provide BTC collateral loans? (I'm looking for a thorough list along with APY comparisons)
About the loan:
How is the collateral appraised? (Is it based on the current BTC price?)
What happens if the price of BTC goes down? (What’s the liquidation threshold?)
Can I set up alerts to notify me before liquidation happens?
On the risk side:
If my income doesn't come through and I can't pay back, what happens to my collateral?
Is there any sort of insurance or protection against slippage?
Tax stuff:
So, borrowing against BTC collateral means no tax event, right?
And paying back the loan with business income isn't taxable?
And finally:
How long does it take from signing up to actually getting the funds? (I really need it in 4 to 6 weeks)
I'm all ears for practical experiences and other suggestions for platforms. Appreciate it!
Leveraging Bitcoin collateral loans for funding tax-friendly option
11 replies 334 views
We cannot answer this question without knowing your tax residence.
Even if crypto is only taxed on capital gains, there may be other taxes involving your usage of crypto which are not accounted for.
Also borrowing a large amount at once will usually trigger a red flag. (Because KYC)
We are not lawyers or accountants here.
diamond_2020Legendary
Posts: 1256 · Reputation: 6502
#3Sep 10, 2017, 08:50 AM
I've studied how these platforms work.
The maximum amount you can get is usually 70-80% of the Bitcoin price, but this carries significant risks.
If Bitcoin is worth 100,000, you can get around 80,000 stablecoins. But you can also get 10,000 without risking anything.
But this doesn't protect you from smart contract errors or hackers hacking the project.
I appreciate the caution, but I need practical execution answers, not tax/legal theory. I'm looking for straightforward technical info.
Specific questions:
1. How much can I borrow against 0.13546834148886616 Bitcoin?
2. Which platform is fastest to access funds? (1-3 day timeline?)
3. Can I withdraw to an anonymous wallet or non-KYC exchange instead of a bank account? (I need to stay anonymous for security reasons not hiding from tax, just protecting myself.)
4. Repayment in 2-3 months any issues?
That's it. Just practical execution steps.
Maxxing out the loan amount is almost a guaranteed liquidation.
However, if it is 10-20% of the collateral value, it's rather safe and if OPs tax residence indeed allows that, tax free too.
But there are 2 more points of failure: wrapped BTC used in DeFi and as you already mentioned, the platform's smart-contract risks.
Honestly OP, you'd probably be better off just doing it on a CEX, like Bybit (I'm sure there are more), it's much easier and reduces points of failure to a single one - exchange itself.
Ok, you didn't mention anonymity was so crucial.
1. Depends on your risk tolerance. Half of its USD value at the moment of borrowing is the maximum I'd recommend.
2. Funds are available immediately, but getting your BTC "wrapped" so it could be used on EVM-chains might take some time if you have to avoid centralised services.
3. Funds you borrowed (i.e. USDT on Ethereum) are yours onchain, you do whatever you want with them.
4. No issues, just piling up more interest fee to pay. Assuming you didn't get liquidated, of course.
Just try to do all this on, say, Aave with $5 as a test and you'll see how simple it is and learn what mechanics of it may concern you.
Op this move might look good on papers but did you take your time to calculate the risk involved? Before looking for platform recommendations to perfect your loan deal, have you considered the liquidation risk?
Since Bitcoin is a volatile asset, if it drops heavily during those 4-6 weeks, you could end up losing part of your collateral in your bid to avoid taxable sale. If that happens, the tax savings will no longer make sense.
boss_wizardSenior Member
Posts: 270 · Reputation: 1192
#8Sep 13, 2017, 10:38 PM
Find platform that have good liquidation threshold, good supply interest, and low borrow interest. In aave it's 0.03% for BTC supply and 3.5% supply for borrow, calculate how much interest you will pay.
If you want more practical solution, centralized exchanges usually offer better liquidation threshold around 90-95% because the coin is in their system which means no on chain overhead which is the reason why defi put liquidation at 70-80% and they have different interest for time-based loan like flexible, 7d, 30d and so on.
What you need to do after that is monitor your LTV.
Very true, there can be other taxes that OP don't know based on OP residence, better consult to the expert in your area OP.
Balanced perspective on collateral loans legitimate finance, not reckless
Thanks for the caution, but let me offer a different angle.
Collateral-based lending isn't new or risky - it's how mortgages work:
People borrow against residential property equity every day
LTV ~70-80%, interest rates ~4-5%
If property crashes, they lose collateral
Nobody calls this "reckless," it's standard centralised trad finance
Bitcoin collateral loans work the same way. The risk isn't inherent to the product it's about LTV management.
Practical risk mitigation:
Borrow 10-50% LTV, not 90% (I'm borrowing ~30%, not maxing out)
Set liquidation alerts at 60-65% LTV (plenty of buffer)
Use 30-day time-based loans, not perpetual
Have exit plan: if BTC drops 15%, sell before liquidation hits
Match repayment to income timeline: borrow 2-3 months worth, repay from earnings
With these safeguards, volatility is manageable.
Why this matters:
Avoids capital gains tax on asset sale (~30% loss)
Opens finance to people traditional banks reject
Temporary capital bridge while building income
Repay in 2-3 months = low-risk window
The gatekeeping ("consult a tax expert," "too risky for you") keeps working people dependent on predatory systems.
Collateral loans are legitimate finance. Don't be scared into compliance theater.
New digital products are instantly available to consumers, disintermediates redundant middlemen and decentralises financial power to those responsible enough to pay back the loan.
Smart contract risk is real, but manageable - not a gatekeeper excuse
Yes, DeFi hacks happen. But:
1. Aave & Compound track record:
Aave: Operating since 2020, $10B+ TVL, no major hack
Compound: Operating since 2018, extensively audited
Both undergo regular security audits (public, verifiable)
2. Insurance available:
Nexus Mutual covers smart contract exploits
Lido DAO insurance
These reduce actual loss risk
3. Risk is proportional to LTV:
At 30% LTV, even a 50% hack loss = I still have collateral cushion
At 90% LTV, any hack = liquidation
Borrow conservatively, risk is minimal
4. 30-day loan = short exposure window
Hack overnight? Unlikely in 30 days
If worried, monitor daily and exit early
5. Traditional banks hacked too:
Mt. Gox was years ago; modern protocols are stronger
"But banks have FDIC insurance" yes, and they charge for it
Avoids capital gains tax instead
6. Public audit reports:
Aave publishes security audits (Trail of Bits, OpenZeppelin)
Users can verify security measures
More transparent than traditional banking
I have created a small xls sheet that allow to calculate with NEXO such kind of loans (lombard).
To be honest, there are many advantages. But you need to take care of each step since even an anticipate payment of interest should be take in account.
About tax... this is not the same in all the countries and once you use btc for closing your credit line, this can be seen as "selling" of coins so another taxable event.
The advantages here are different from a classic loan. I would suggest always to make many iterations and try before any possible scenario...
Likewise if you have sold your btc on Dec 2025 for sure you made a better decision than access to FIAT nowadays with a lombard
Aside the options you have mentioned, you can also consider CoinRabbit, they providea the flexibility of loan you may require, you can check their platform or even contact their customer support line for more enquiry, I've tried doing such before and you get attended to by real human agent and not bot, most importantly, try to read their policies and see that you're aligned with the policy.
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