Learn how to live off bitcoin without selling: fund living expenses with low-LTV loans against your BTC, defer taxes, preserve upside, and avoid liquidation.
Arkadii Kaminskyi
Head of Operations at Sats Terminal
Head of Operations at Sats Terminal with 5 years of experience in crypto. Specializes in DeFi, yield farming, and borrowing — has reviewed 50+ crypto products.

Plenty of people now hold more wealth in bitcoin than in their brokerage account, yet they still wake up to the same paycheck-to-paycheck cashflow as everyone else. The idea of learning to live off bitcoin without selling it is no longer a thought experiment reserved for early miners and venture funds. It is a concrete, mechanical strategy: pledge a portion of your BTC as collateral, draw stablecoins or cash for living expenses, never trigger a sale, and let the underlying stack keep compounding in the background. Done with discipline, it lets you fund a life without printing a single capital-gains tax bill. Done carelessly, it is one of the fastest ways to get liquidated at the bottom of a bear market. This guide is about staying firmly in the first camp.
What follows is a long-horizon lifestyle and cashflow framework, not a single-loan walkthrough and not tax advice. We will cover the core mechanics, the multi-year math under three very different BTC scenarios, the buffers and discipline that make it survivable, how it stacks up against simply selling, the estate angle that makes the wealthy love this approach, and a blunt list of situations where you should not attempt it at all. If you only want to take one loan to cover one expense, our step-by-step on how to borrow money against bitcoin without selling your BTC is the better starting point. This post assumes you want to do it repeatedly, for years.
Wall Street has a name for this pattern: buy, borrow, die. Wealthy households buy appreciating assets, borrow against them through securities-backed lines of credit (SBLOCs) to fund spending, and pass the assets to heirs at death, where a stepped-up cost basis can erase the embedded gain. The whole point is to access liquidity without ever realizing a taxable sale. Bitcoin holders can run a remarkably similar playbook, because BTC is property in the eyes of the IRS, and pledging property as collateral is not the same as selling it.
The strategy rests on three boring facts about the tax and lending system that, stacked together, become powerful:
Put the three together and you get the reason this is attractive: you can fund years of living expenses with money that never hits a tax return, while your collateral keeps appreciating. The "buy borrow die bitcoin" version simply substitutes a volatile digital asset for a diversified equity portfolio, which is exactly where the extra risk comes from. Equities rarely fall 70% in a year. Bitcoin has done it more than once. That single difference reshapes every parameter in the strategy.
Rule of thumb: The wealthy run buy-borrow-die against diversified, low-volatility collateral. You are running it against one of the most volatile liquid assets on earth. Compensate by borrowing far less, holding far more buffer, and never assuming the next leg is up.
Strip away the jargon and the mechanics are simple. You deposit BTC (often as wrapped bitcoin such as wBTC or cbBTC on a DeFi protocol, or native BTC with a CeFi lender), you draw a loan against it, and you spend the proceeds. The art is entirely in the parameters and the cadence. Here is the loop you are committing to run, year after year.
Your stack has to be big enough that a conservative draw funds a meaningful chunk of your life. If you want $40,000 a year of spending and you are only willing to run a 10-15% loan-to-value ratio, you need roughly $300,000-$400,000 of BTC working as collateral, plus a separate buffer. We will sharpen these numbers in the math section, but the headline is that this is a strategy for people who already hold a substantial stack, not a way to manufacture income from a small one.
The single most important decision is your loan-to-value ratio. LTV is the loan balance divided by the collateral value; if you borrow $20,000 against $200,000 of BTC, your LTV is 10%. Most platforms will let you go to 50% (CeFi) or higher on some DeFi markets, but living-off-your-stack borrowers should anchor far lower. Crucially, do not draw a full year at once. Pull living expenses in quarterly or monthly tranches so that idle borrowed cash is not accruing interest before you need it, and so a sudden price drop does not catch you with a large balance and no flexibility. Our guide on optimizing your LTV ratio covers the trade-offs in detail.
This is the rule most people skip, and it is the rule that saves accounts. You hold a pool of cash or stablecoins outside the collateral that exists for one purpose: to repay loan principal and push your LTV back down when BTC falls. If your buffer can cut your loan balance in a crash, a margin call becomes a manageable transfer instead of a forced sale. More on sizing this below.
Healthy versions of this strategy do not let the loan balance grow forever. You repay opportunistically: from outside income, from trimming the loan when BTC rips higher (your LTV falls, giving you room), or from the buffer when it falls. When a fixed-term loan matures, you roll it, refinance to a better rate, or pay it down. Think of it as a permanent, actively managed bitcoin line of credit rather than a one-time transaction.
You watch your health factor or LTV the way a sailor watches weather. When the position drifts toward your risk limit you act early, by adding collateral, repaying, or pausing draws. The discipline of acting at "uncomfortable" rather than "emergency" is what separates the people who run this for a decade from the people who get a liquidation email.
Because you will be borrowing repeatedly for years, the venue matters more than it does for a single loan. Rates, liquidation mechanics, custody, and refinance flexibility all compound over time. As of early 2026 the landscape splits into two broad camps.
| Factor | DeFi (Aave, Morpho) | CeFi lenders |
|---|---|---|
| Typical borrow rate (early 2026) | ~3-7%, variable; can spike with utilization | ~9-12% APR, often fixed |
| Max LTV offered | Up to ~75-82% on BTC markets (do not use it all) | Commonly capped near 50% |
| Custody | Non-custodial; you hold keys, smart contract holds collateral | Custodial; lender or partner holds your BTC |
| Liquidation | Automatic, algorithmic, can be partial | Margin call, then liquidation per contract |
| Collateral form | Wrapped BTC (wBTC, cbBTC, tBTC) | Often native BTC |
| Best for | Lower long-run cost, transparency, control | Simplicity, fixed payments, fiat rails |
For a multi-year strategy, the rate gap is enormous. Paying 5% versus 11% on a balance you carry for a decade is the difference between a sustainable plan and a slowly compounding problem. That said, variable DeFi rates can spike during periods of high borrowing demand, so a blended approach, where some of your line is fixed-rate for predictability and some is variable for cheapness, is often the most resilient. If you are weighing the two, our breakdown of comparing DeFi vs CeFi lending and the post on whether you should sell or borrow against your bitcoin both go deeper. Whatever you choose, the entire reason an aggregator exists is to keep that rate as low as possible across every roll.
Tip: Over a 10-year horizon, refinancing your line even once a year to chase the lowest available rate can save more than any single clever LTV decision. Treat your borrow rate as something you actively shop, not something you set and forget.
Numbers make this concrete. Let's model a holder with $1,000,000 of bitcoin who wants to "retire on bitcoin" cashflow of $40,000 per year, drawn as loans, never selling. We will assume BTC is around $100,000 per coin for round numbers (it moves constantly, so treat this as illustrative, not a forecast), giving our holder roughly 10 BTC. They run a target LTV ceiling of 25% and start by drawing the first year's $40,000, a starting LTV of 4%.
The $40,000 figure is deliberate: it is the same 4% that the classic safe-withdrawal "4% rule" would pull from a $1,000,000 portfolio, except here you are borrowing it, not selling it. Notably, 2026 retirement research has nudged the "safe" sell-down rate below 4% (Morningstar and others now cite roughly 3.3-3.9% for new retirees), which makes the borrow-instead-of-sell comparison even more interesting, because borrowing leaves the entire principal invested.
This is the bull case, and it is where the strategy shines. Each year BTC appreciates faster than your loan balance grows, so even as you draw another $40,000 plus interest, your LTV stays low or even falls. Watch how the position evolves:
| Year | Collateral value (BTC +15%/yr) | Cumulative loan + ~7% interest | LTV |
|---|---|---|---|
| Start | $1,000,000 | $40,000 | 4% |
| 3 | ~$1,521,000 | ~$132,000 | ~9% |
| 5 | ~$2,011,000 | ~$246,000 | ~12% |
| 10 | ~$4,046,000 | ~$663,000 | ~16% |
After a decade you have pulled $400,000 of tax-free spending money, your loan balance with compounding interest sits near $663,000, and your collateral has quadrupled to over $4,000,000. Your net position has grown enormously and your LTV is still comfortable. This is the dream outcome, and it is the one every enthusiast pictures. It is also the outcome you must not plan around, because the next two scenarios are equally possible.
Now assume BTC simply goes sideways at $100,000 for ten years. Your collateral never grows, but your loan balance keeps climbing from both new draws and compounding interest. This is the quiet killer that enthusiasts underestimate.
| Year | Collateral value (flat) | Cumulative loan + ~7% interest | LTV |
|---|---|---|---|
| Start | $1,000,000 | $40,000 | 4% |
| 3 | $1,000,000 | ~$132,000 | ~13% |
| 5 | $1,000,000 | ~$246,000 | ~25% |
| 10 | $1,000,000 | ~$663,000 | ~66% |
By year five you have already hit your 25% LTV ceiling, and you cannot keep drawing without either repaying or accepting a riskier position. By year ten, with no appreciation to bail you out, your LTV is in dangerous territory and a single ordinary drawdown could liquidate you. Stagnation, not collapse, is what quietly ends most naive versions of this plan, because interest compounds whether or not the price moves. A flat market plus a 7% loan rate means your debt roughly doubles every decade on its own.
Here is the nightmare. Say in year three BTC falls 60% to $40,000 and lingers there. Your $1,000,000 collateral is now worth $400,000. If you had been disciplined and your loan balance was only ~$130,000, your LTV jumps from ~13% to ~33%, uncomfortable but survivable, especially if you stop drawing and lean on your buffer. But if you had been aggressive and carried, say, a $250,000 balance at a 25% LTV before the crash, that same drop pushes your LTV to ~63%, deep into liquidation range on most platforms. The lesson is unforgiving: the borrower's starting LTV before the crash determines whether a 60% drawdown is an inconvenience or a catastrophe.
Warning: Bitcoin has historically experienced drawdowns of 70-80% peak-to-trough in past bear markets, and even 2026 saw a sharp decline of roughly 49% from its prior high within months. A "live off your stack" plan that only survives if BTC never falls hard is not a plan; it is a bet. Size every parameter so you survive a 70% drop without forced selling.
The three scenarios above all turn on the same handful of dials. Here is how disciplined practitioners set them.
If a protocol liquidates at, say, 70-85% LTV, you do not run anywhere near it. A durable living-off-bitcoin posture keeps steady-state LTV in the 10-25% range and treats anything above 30-35% as a flashing red light demanding action. Why so conservative? Because at 20% LTV, BTC has to fall roughly 70-75% before you approach a typical liquidation threshold, which buys you the room to survive a historic-scale bear market. At 50% LTV, a 30-40% drop can end you. The math of the buffer is the whole strategy. Our explainer on the loan-to-value ratio and the post on how LTV ratios affect your position are worth internalizing before you start.
Separate from your collateral, keep a reserve, ideally in stablecoins or cash, equal to one to three years of planned spending plus a slug earmarked for principal paydowns. In a crash this buffer does double duty: it funds your life so you can pause borrowing, and it lets you repay principal to drag your LTV back down. The borrower who can throw $100,000 at a loan during a 60% drawdown turns a near-liquidation into a routine de-risking. The borrower with no buffer is a forced seller at the worst possible price, which is also a taxable disposition. Our guide to managing bitcoin collateral during volatility covers the crash playbook in depth.
Do not borrow a lump sum and let it sit. Draw quarterly or monthly so interest only accrues on money you are actually spending. Beyond that, ladder your borrowing the way bond investors ladder maturities: stagger several smaller loans with different terms and rates rather than one giant position. Laddering means no single refinance date can blow up your whole plan, and you can roll the cheapest tranche while leaving a fixed-rate tranche untouched. It also smooths your effective interest rate across the rate cycle.
| Requirement | Why it matters | Reasonable target |
|---|---|---|
| Stack size | Conservative LTV only funds real spending if the stack is large | ~20-30x desired annual draw at low LTV |
| Steady-state LTV | Buys survival room through a 70%+ drawdown | 10-25%, ceiling ~30-35% |
| Standby buffer | Funds life and repays principal during crashes | 1-3 years of draws, held outside collateral |
| Rate discipline | Interest compounds for years; small differences add up | Refinance to lowest available rate regularly |
| Temperament | The plan fails on panic, not on math | Ability to act early and not check price daily |
Every other risk is secondary to this one. In a deep, lengthy bear market, your collateral value falls while your loan balance does not, so your LTV climbs from both ends. If it crosses the liquidation threshold, the platform sells your BTC to repay the loan, locking in your loss at the bottom and, to add insult, creating a taxable capital gain or loss on the liquidated coins. You lose the asset, you lose the upside of the eventual recovery, and you may owe tax on the forced sale. It is the single worst outcome in all of crypto-backed borrowing, and it tends to strike exactly when you can least afford it.
Three forces conspire in a bear market:
The defenses are the ones we have already covered, used together: a low starting LTV so you have runway, a buffer so you can repay instead of panic, paused draws during drawdowns, and proactive monitoring so you act before the platform acts for you. To understand exactly how the trigger works, read up on liquidation and the deeper post on what happens if you cannot repay a crypto loan. You can also estimate your danger zone in advance with our sibling guide on calculating your liquidation price.
Suppose you hold 10 BTC at $100,000 each ($1,000,000) and carry a $200,000 loan, a 20% LTV. Your platform liquidates at 75% LTV. The liquidation price is the BTC price at which your $200,000 loan equals 75% of your collateral value. Collateral value at liquidation = $200,000 / 0.75 = $266,667. Divide by 10 BTC and the per-coin liquidation price is about $26,667, a 73% drop from $100,000. At a 50% LTV instead ($500,000 loan), the liquidation price rises to about $66,667 per coin, only a 33% drop away. Same collateral, wildly different survival odds, purely as a function of how much you borrowed. This is why the people who run this strategy for years obsess over keeping the loan small.
The honest competitor to borrowing is simply selling a little BTC each year, the way a traditional retiree sells stocks under the 4% rule. Selling is simpler, carries no liquidation risk, and incurs no ongoing interest. So why borrow at all? Two reasons: tax deferral and preserved upside. When you sell, you realize capital gains and shrink the position that compounds going forward. When you borrow, the entire stack keeps working and no tax is due on the draw.
| Dimension | Selling BTC (4% rule style) | Borrowing against BTC |
|---|---|---|
| Tax on cashflow | Capital gains realized each year | No tax on loan proceeds (not a sale) |
| Upside retained | Shrinking position compounds less | Full stack keeps appreciating |
| Ongoing cost | None, but you lose future growth on sold coins | Interest on the borrowed balance |
| Liquidation risk | None | Real, in a deep bear market |
| Complexity | Low | Moderate to high; requires active management |
| Best when | BTC stagnant or you want zero leverage | You expect long-run appreciation and can manage risk |
The crossover logic is intuitive: borrowing wins when your expected long-run BTC appreciation comfortably exceeds your borrow rate, and when you have the buffer and discipline to survive the drawdowns along the way. If you genuinely believe BTC will stagnate or fall over your horizon, selling is the rational choice and you should not be leveraging it at all. There is no shame in selling; it is the lower-risk path. The "buy borrow die" approach is a bet that BTC's long-run return beats your interest cost by a wide enough margin to justify the liquidation risk and the active management. For a structured way to make this call, see our framework on selling versus borrowing and the use case for tax-efficient portfolio rebalancing.
The "die" in buy-borrow-die is what makes the wealthiest practitioners willing to carry debt indefinitely. Under current U.S. law (IRC §1014), when assets pass to heirs at death, their cost basis is stepped up to fair market value. In theory, heirs could then sell enough BTC to repay the outstanding loans at the new basis, owing little or no capital gains tax on decades of appreciation, and keep the rest. The embedded gain that you deferred your whole life can be wiped clean at death. That is the full circle: buy, borrow against it for life, die, and let the step-up settle the tab tax-efficiently.
Two heavy caveats, and we are explicitly not giving tax or legal advice here, so confirm everything with a qualified professional:
So treat the estate angle as a hedge and a long-term tailwind, not the core justification. The defensible reasons to live off your bitcoin are the lifetime ones: deferring tax, preserving upside, and keeping optionality. The step-up is a bonus that may or may not survive in its current form. Frame it accordingly, and do not let an inheritance theory tempt you into carrying more debt than the liquidation math can support.
This strategy is genuinely powerful for the right person and genuinely dangerous for the wrong one. Be honest with yourself about which you are. Do not attempt to live off your bitcoin loans if any of the following describe you:
The blunt version: "Live off bitcoin without selling" works for the over-collateralized, well-buffered, emotionally disciplined holder with a large stack and a long horizon. For everyone else, the responsible move is to borrow only for specific needs, or to sell a measured amount and sleep at night.
If you do decide this fits you, reduce it to a repeatable yearly routine so it runs on rules rather than emotion:
Run that loop with discipline and you have a tax-efficient, upside-preserving income engine. Run it without the buffer and the conservative LTV and you have a liquidation waiting to happen.
Common Questions
Yes, mechanically you can fund living expenses with rolling loans against your BTC and never trigger a sale, which defers capital-gains tax and preserves upside. But it only works sustainably with a large stack, a conservative loan-to-value ratio, a multi-year cash buffer, and the discipline to repay in downturns. Without those, a prolonged bear market can force a liquidation, which is itself a taxable sale at the worst possible price.