Aven Launches Bitcoin-Backed Visa Card With Credit Lines of Up to $1 Million

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  • Aven is launching a Bitcoin-backed Visa card that offers credit lines of up to $1 million.

  • The product includes fixed-rate, fixed-term loans of up to 10 years at a 7.99% APR, a structure the company says differs from typical Bitcoin lending products.


Aven is bringing Bitcoin into a corner of consumer finance that has usually stayed reserved for home equity and securities-backed borrowing.

The fintech company said it is launching the Aven Bitcoin Visa Card, a product that will give users access to a Bitcoin-backed line of credit of up to $1 million.

That alone would make it one of the larger consumer-facing crypto credit offerings in the market, but the more notable part may be how the company is framing the product.

This is not being pitched as another short-term crypto loan with volatile pricing and narrow repayment windows. It is being presented as a more traditional credit instrument, simply with Bitcoin used as the collateral base.

Aven is trying to make Bitcoin credit look more like mainstream lending

Aven was founded in 2019 and has focused on what it calls asset-backed credit cards, using existing borrower assets rather than relying purely on unsecured credit models. Until now, that has meant things like securities and home equity. Adding Bitcoin extends the same approach into digital assets.

The company says the card will offer fixed-rate, fixed-term loans for as long as 10 years, with an advertised 7.99% APR. That is a meaningful distinction because Bitcoin-backed lending has often been associated with shorter maturities, floating rates and loan structures that can feel more like tactical leverage than consumer finance.

According to the report, many competing Bitcoin-backed products still carry APR rates of 10% or more and terms of around 12 months.

The product tests whether Bitcoin can function as ordinary collateral

That is the broader significance here. Aven is not really asking whether people want to borrow against Bitcoin. That question has already been answered. The real test is whether Bitcoin can be folded into a more familiar credit framework, one that looks closer to established lending than to crypto-native margin finance.

If that works, the market may pay attention. A Bitcoin-backed card with large credit lines, long maturities and fixed pricing would push digital assets a little further into conventional household balance-sheet logic, which is still where much of crypto’s next legitimacy test sits.

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