For Title & Escrow Companies

Say yes to crypto buyers. Close like it's cash.

When a buyer wants to fund with crypto, RealOpen converts it to dollars and wires to escrow on the buyer's behalf. You run a normal cash closing — you never touch crypto. You still get credit for making the deal happen.
  • Buyer funds arrive via wire, like any cash closing
  • You close and disburse exactly like a cash deal
  • Zero crypto knowledge required

Can you close a crypto buyer? You have the right answer

Agents and buyers asking if you can accept Bitcoin, USDC, or USDT? You have a solution that makes your life easy and gets their deal done. Send them to RealOpen, and we’ll convert the crypto to fiat and deliver good funds via your wire instructions. It’s just another cash closing.

Buyers can even use crypto as a down payment with a traditional mortgage. Don’t lose another deal over crypto uncertainty.

How it works for your file

From your seat it’s a cash deal. RealOpen carries everything on the crypto side; see how RealOpen works for the buyer’s-eye view.

1. The buyer verifies with RealOpen

Identity (KYC), AML and sanctions screening, and source-of-funds documentation — completed before anything moves.

2. The buyer funds in crypto

The buyer sends Bitcoin, Ethereum, USDC, USDT, or another supported asset to RealOpen.

3. RealOpen converts the crypto to cash

The cryptocurrency is converted to U.S. dollars through a regulated OTC desk — RealOpen holds the custody and conversion risk, not you.

4. RealOpen wires USD to your escrow account

Good funds arrive as a standard U.S. dollar wire to your escrow or settlement account, with reference details like any other transaction.

5. You close and disburse conventionally

The only thing hitting your settlement account is a standard wire. You close, issue title, and disburse exactly as you would on any cash deal.

Built around your good-funds and compliance rules

Cryptocurrency never enters your accounts. You get a standard dollar wire and close the file the way you always do. Before that, RealOpen verifies the buyer's identity, runs AML and sanctions screening, and documents where the funds came from — so what reaches your desk is a vetted, cash-ready buyer, not a wallet screenshot.

For the mechanics behind this, see how crypto real estate closings and escrow actually work, and how a verified Proof of Funds letter replaces the wallet screenshot.

Be the title company that says yes to crypto buyers.

Frequently asked questions

Have more questions? Reach out anytime.

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