How to borrow against your crypto - step by step with real numbers
A lot of explanations of crypto loans are vague or skip the parts that matter. Here's a concrete walkthrough with actual numbers.
Step 1: Understand LTV (Loan-to-Value). LTV is the ratio of your loan to your collateral value. Deposit $10,000 in Bitcoin, borrow $5,000 - that's 50% LTV. Most platforms let you borrow 50–90% depending on the asset and loan term. Higher LTV = more cash but less buffer before liquidation.
Step 2: Calculate your real liquidation threshold. Real numbers: you deposit $10,000 in BTC, borrow $6,000 (60% LTV). If BTC drops 25%, collateral is now worth $7,500. Loan is still $6,000 - LTV is now 80%. Most platforms warn around 80–85% and liquidate around 90–95%. Starting at 60% LTV, a 33% price drop puts you in danger. Starting at 50% LTV, it takes a 44% drop. That buffer matters enormously.
Step 3: Understand loan terms vs LTV. This matters more than people realise. On YouHodler for example: 30-day loans go up to 90% LTV, 60-day up to 70% LTV, 180-day up to 50% LTV. Longer term = lower available LTV = more buffer built in. Choose the term that fits your actual need, not just the one that lets you borrow most.
Step 4: Interest rates. Typically 8–15% APR depending on platform and term. On a $5,000 loan at 12% APR for 3 months, you pay about $150 in interest. That's the cost of keeping your crypto position.
Step 5: Platform differences. Nexo and Ledn are well-known, offer around 50% LTV on BTC. YouHodler goes up to 90% LTV on 30-day loans, Swiss-regulated. More in r/ YouHodler_Official on the specifics.
Step 6: Manage it actively. Not set-and-forget. Check LTV every few days during volatile periods. Most platforms let you add collateral or partially repay to bring LTV down. Have a plan: at what BTC price will you add collateral? At what price will you repay early?
TL;DR: Start at 50% LTV or lower, know what price triggers your liquidation, have cash ready to act. The interest is usually your smallest concern - liquidation is the real risk. Questions welcome.
[link] [comments]