What is MUSD?
Bitcoin holders have historically faced an impossible choice: sell your BTC to cover expenses, trust a centralized lender to hold custody of your bitcoin, or hold indefinitely and miss out on the liquidity you need to support your life. MUSD changes that. It is a permissionless stablecoin, 100% backed by Bitcoin reserves, designed to maintain a 1:1 peg with the U.S. dollar. Mint MUSD by depositing BTC as collateral, spend it anywhere dollars are accepted, and keep your full Bitcoin exposure the entire time. When you’re done, return the borrowed MUSD plus interest and get your BTC back.
Why MUSD?
MUSD offers a unique value proposition for Bitcoin holders who want liquidity without selling their BTC.
- Never sell your Bitcoin — Borrow against up to 90% of your BTC holdings. Keep your sats, tap into your Bitcoin equity, and pay your loan back whenever you want.
- Fixed rates from 1–5% — Your interest rate is locked when you open your loan and never changes. No variable rates, no surprises. Compare that to 7–20% APR at traditional banks or 8–9% on other DeFi platforms.
- Fully onchain and verifiable — Every loan and every dollar of collateral is visible onchain, 24/7. No opaque reserves, no custodians — just Bitcoin in a smart contract vault. View the collateral live on the Mezo explorer.
- Permissionless — No credit checks, no applications, no minimums beyond the 1,800 MUSD floor. If you have BTC, you can borrow.
How MUSD Works
MUSD uses a CDP (collateralized debt position) model. Every outstanding MUSD is redeemable for Bitcoin, and $1 in BTC collateral can be used to mint 1 MUSD.
This mint-and-redeem model is what keeps MUSD pegged to $1 — even in volatile markets:
- **MUSD trading below 1 of underlying BTC. Users with an open loan can do this at no additional cost. Those without a loan pay a 0.75% redemption fee, which remains profitable until MUSD reaches $0.995.
- **MUSD trading above 1.005.
For details on how these safety mechanisms work, see Liquidations & Redemptions.
Benefits of the MUSD Model
Supply-sided Liquidity
Unlike traditional two-sided lending protocols that need a pool of pre-existing dollars and use variable interest rates to balance supply and demand, MUSD is minted directly from Bitcoin collateral. Liquidity grows organically as more users deposit BTC — the system self-generates its supply, so liquidity is always available for new borrowers.Fixed, Low Borrowing Rates
Because MUSD is minted rather than borrowed from a pool, there’s no rate competition driving up costs. The result: fixed rates as low as 1%, locked in for the life of your loan. That makes MUSD significantly cheaper than conventional lending markets where rates are variable and can spike unpredictably.Capital Efficiency
MUSD supports a minimum collateralization ratio of just 110%, meaning borrowers can access up to 90% of their Bitcoin’s value.
MUSD vs. Traditional Finance
For Bitcoin holders, the financial system has always meant compromise: high fees, opaque custody, variable rates, and centralized intermediaries. MUSD brings the benefits of onchain finance — transparency, low cost, self-custody — directly to your Bitcoin.
No wire fees, no FX spreads, no monthly account charges. Just your Bitcoin in a decentralized smart contract vault, working for you.
MUSD Comparison to Existing Stablecoins
The stablecoin market is broad, ranging from fiat-backed stables (USDT and USDC) to synthetic stables (USDe) to other algorithmic CDPs (Liquity, Sky). While the growth of these stablecoins has been remarkable over the past few years, there is still a gap in the market for Bitcoiners. MUSD aims to address these risks with its pure Bitcoin backing.Fiat-Backed Stablecoins
Fiat-Backed Stablecoins
Fiat-backed stablecoins like USDT and USDC make up more than 90% of the current stablecoin market. Not only are they a complete juxtaposition with crypto’s ethos, as they are backed by the U.S. dollar, but the dollar reserves must be held safely by a single entity.Tether, the issuing entity for USDT (~13B profit in 2024.Circle, a U.S. company issuing USDC, has the ability to blacklist addresses at their discretion and pays exchanges to hold their asset. As the U.S. economy moves onchain, this becomes a dangerous point of centralization.
Synthetic Stablecoins
Synthetic Stablecoins
Synthetic stablecoins (for example, USDe) often depend on centralized exchanges and custody solutions to maintain their value. The risk of this exposure became abundant as Bybit recently faced the largest hack on record.Additionally, stablecoins that are synthetically backed by the yield from a basis trade are unpredictable and untested. Funding rates are variable, and the systems have not been tested against various external market pressures.
CDP-Style Coins like USDS
CDP-Style Coins like USDS
CDP-based stablecoins typically collateralize their positions with a basket of tokens, including fiat-backed stables and various altcoins.While this diversification can spread risk, it also brings significant challenges. The collateral, often composed of volatile assets like ETH-related tokens or other stablecoins, may react unpredictably under market stress and are often times significantly more volatile than BTC. This can compromise the stablecoin’s peg and complicate the redemption and liquidation processes.