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Robinhood: margin rates for borrowing against a Bitcoin ETF

How Robinhood prices a margin loan, the leverage it allows, and what to verify before borrowing against IBIT or another spot Bitcoin ETF. Figures verified 2026-06-12; margin rates are variable.

Margin rate

5%

Reg T leverage

~2x

Portfolio margin

Not offered

Margin rate schedule

Tiered by margin (debit) balance. Fed Funds target upper bound + tiered spread (Robinhood Gold). Rates effective 2025-12-11.

Margin balanceRate
$0 – $50K5%
$50K – $100K4.8%
$100K – $1M4.5%
$1M – $10M4.25%
$10M – $50M4.2%
$50M+3.95%

Can you margin IBIT here?

Robinhood does not publish whether a specific spot Bitcoin ETF is marginable, or the house maintenance requirement it would apply. That is set per security and changes with volatility, so confirm it directly with the broker before relying on it. Holding an ETF is not the same as being allowed to borrow against it.

  • Margin requires a Robinhood Gold subscription ($5/mo or $50/yr); first $1,000 interest-free
  • No portfolio margin (Reg T strategy-based only)
  • IBIT marginability and maintenance ratio (stated 25-100% range) are shown in-app only
Visit Robinhood margin page →

Common questions

What is Robinhood's margin interest rate?

Published margin rates run 5% depending on your debit balance. Margin rates are variable and were verified 2026-06-12.

Can I borrow against a Bitcoin ETF like IBIT at Robinhood?

Whether Robinhood will let you margin a specific spot Bitcoin ETF, and the house maintenance requirement it sets, is decided per security and is generally not published. Robinhood Confirm IBIT's marginability and maintenance requirement with Robinhood before relying on it.

Does Robinhood offer portfolio margin?

No. Robinhood offers standard Reg T margin only (about 2x), not portfolio margin.

What are the risks of borrowing against a Bitcoin ETF at Robinhood?

Margin uses leverage, which amplifies losses. If your ETF drops, Robinhood can issue a margin call and sell your shares without notice, and you can lose more than you invested. Margin rates are variable. This is a higher-risk path than an over-collateralized Bitcoin-backed loan. This is general information, not advice.

Borrowing against a Bitcoin ETF through a brokerage is margin lending, a fundamentally different and higher-risk path than an over-collateralized Bitcoin-backed loan. Margin uses leverage, which amplifies losses as well as gains. If your ETF falls in value the broker can issue a margin call and sell your shares without notice, possibly at the worst time, and you can lose more than you put in. Margin interest rates are variable and reset when benchmark rates move. Each broker sets its own house maintenance requirement on a single volatile crypto ETF, which is often higher than the standard 25 to 30 percent, is set per security, and can change without notice. We are a publisher, not a broker, lender, or investment adviser, and nothing here is a recommendation to use margin or leverage. Verify every figure, and your own eligibility, with the broker before acting.

borrowonbitcoin.com is a publisher, not a broker-dealer, bank, or investment adviser. We may receive compensation from some brokers when you visit them through our site; affiliate links are labeled. Compensation never changes a broker's ranking, position, or the data we publish. Comparing or listing a broker is not an endorsement of that broker or of margin trading. Margin and leverage involve a real risk of losing more than you invest; verify all terms with the broker before applying.