Most family office Bitcoin content focuses on allocation: how much to hold, when to buy, what the macro case is. This guide ignores all of that. Allocation is the easy decision. Custody is the one that actually determines whether your family still has the Bitcoin in thirty years — and whether your heirs can access it after you're gone.
The stakes are asymmetric in a way that no other asset class presents. A $20 million Bitcoin position held in a poorly designed custody arrangement can vanish permanently — through a forgotten seed phrase, a house fire that destroys the only hardware wallet, a custodian insolvency where client assets were commingled, or a death where no heir knows how to access the keys. There is no SIPC. There is no FDIC. There is no issuer to call. The Bitcoin is either accessible or it is not.
Getting custody right is the job. Everything else is secondary.
In This Guide
- Why Custody Is the Central Problem
- The Custody Spectrum: Four Models
- The Qualified Custodian Standard for Family Offices
- How to Evaluate a Bitcoin Custodian
- Qualified Custodians: Deep Dives
- Multisig & Collaborative Custody Options
- Insurance: What's Covered, What's Not
- Regulatory Risk: Lessons from Celsius, Bittrex, Genesis
- Custody and Estate Planning Intersection
- The Hybrid Approach: How Sophisticated Family Offices Split It
- Frequently Asked Questions
Why Custody Is the Family Office's Most Important Bitcoin Decision
Traditional family office assets — equities, bonds, real estate, private equity — have professional custody infrastructure built around them over a century of financial market development. The assets can't disappear. Transfers require legal documentation. Errors are costly but rarely catastrophic. Mistakes are usually reversible with enough legal effort.
Bitcoin is structurally different in every dimension that matters. It is a bearer instrument: whoever controls the private keys controls the Bitcoin. There is no issuer, no registry, no central counterparty, no "forgot my password" recovery mechanism. The asset does not exist in any database that can be overwritten. There is no court order that can reconstitute a burned seed phrase or extract a key from a hardware wallet at the bottom of the ocean.
This is not hyperbole. Chainalysis estimates that roughly 3-4 million Bitcoin — worth hundreds of billions of dollars at current prices — has been permanently lost through operational failures: forgotten seed phrases, destroyed hardware, incorrect transactions, lost access credentials. The overwhelming majority of those losses were preventable with a properly designed custody architecture.
For a family office, the custody problem has an additional dimension: it directly constrains your estate planning options. The legal structure you use to hold Bitcoin — irrevocable trust, LLC, FLP — must be designed around your custody arrangement. A trust where the trustee "holds Bitcoin" but has no operational custody plan is legally coherent but practically useless. The custody architecture must come first; the legal wrapper is built around it. Attempting to layer estate planning onto a poorly designed custody arrangement is one of the most common and costly mistakes we see in this space.
The other dimension unique to family offices: the time horizon. A family office is not a hedge fund with a 7-year life. The goal is generational wealth transfer — Bitcoin held for 30, 50, 100 years across multiple ownership transitions. A custody arrangement that works for one principal's lifetime may fail completely at the point of estate transfer. Every custody decision must be stress-tested against the scenario where the original principal is unavailable.
The Custody Spectrum: Four Models
Bitcoin custody exists on a spectrum from maximum sovereignty to maximum institutional integration. Each point on the spectrum involves real tradeoffs — there is no arrangement that maximizes security, regulatory compliance, operational simplicity, estate planning elegance, and cost simultaneously. Understanding the spectrum clearly is a prerequisite to making an informed choice.
Model 1: Full Self-Custody (Multisig)
The family holds its own private keys in a multisig configuration — typically 2-of-3 or 3-of-5 — across geographically distributed hardware wallets. No third party is involved in the custody arrangement. No counterparty risk. No fees beyond the initial hardware cost. Maximum sovereignty.
Full self-custody is a legitimate option for single-family offices that are not registered as investment advisors, are managing only family assets, and have the operational discipline to maintain rigorous security protocols. It is the purest expression of what Bitcoin was designed to enable. The challenge is operational: it requires documented procedures, regular testing, hardware maintenance, software updates, and an airtight inheritance plan. Families who approach it casually often discover the gaps only when it is too late to fix them.
See our companion guide to Bitcoin multisig hardware wallet setup for the technical implementation details that make the difference between a secure arrangement and a false sense of security.
Model 2: Collaborative Multisig (Hybrid Sovereignty)
Solutions like Unchained Capital and Casa occupy a structurally distinct position: the family holds the majority of keys in a multisig arrangement, a third-party service provider holds one key, but the provider cannot unilaterally spend funds without the family's participation. The family retains key sovereignty; the provider adds operational support, recovery infrastructure, and inheritance planning capability.
This model is not a qualified custodian arrangement under most regulatory frameworks — the provider cannot spend your Bitcoin independently, so it is functionally more like a key escrow service than a custody arrangement. But it solves the most acute operational challenges of pure self-custody without surrendering control to an institution. For many sophisticated family offices, collaborative multisig is the optimal solution for generational holdings.
Model 3: Qualified Institutional Custodian
Regulated financial institutions — OCC-chartered banks, state-chartered trust companies, broker-dealers — that hold client Bitcoin under regulatory oversight. The institution holds the keys; the family has an account claim. This is the model that provides regulatory compliance, meaningful insurance, and institutional reporting — at the cost of counterparty risk and key sovereignty.
Qualified custodians are essential for family offices that are registered as investment advisors managing outside capital, for Bitcoin held inside certain trust structures with institutional trustees, and for operational Bitcoin that needs to be accessible for transactions, rebalancing, or institutional reporting. The institution assumes the operational burden; the family assumes the counterparty risk of the institution.
Model 4: ETF / No Direct Custody
Bitcoin exposure through an ETF (BlackRock's IBIT, Fidelity's FBTC, etc.) involves no direct Bitcoin custody by the family whatsoever. The ETF sponsor holds Bitcoin through institutional custodians; the family holds ETF shares through a traditional brokerage account. This eliminates all Bitcoin-specific custody considerations — and all Bitcoin-specific benefits, including self-custody sovereignty, censorship resistance, and the tax advantages of direct Bitcoin ownership.
For family offices, the ETF wrapper makes sense for: (1) gaining price exposure inside a tax-advantaged account where direct Bitcoin custody is legally complex; (2) allocations small enough that custody infrastructure costs are disproportionate; (3) situations where the investment committee lacks authority to approve a direct Bitcoin custody arrangement but can approve a regulated ETF. It does not make sense as a long-term generational holding strategy — the counterparty stack is deeper, the fees compound for decades, and the Bitcoin's sovereignty properties are entirely captured by the ETF sponsor.
The Qualified Custodian Standard for Family Offices
The question of whether your family office needs a qualified custodian is not a philosophical one — it is a regulatory one. The answer depends on how your family office is structured and whether you manage outside capital.
The Family Office Exemption
Under Dodd-Frank's family office exemption from SEC investment adviser registration, single-family offices that manage only family assets, employ only family members as investment advisors, and meet certain structural requirements are not registered investment advisers. The SEC's custody rule — which generally requires RIAs to maintain client assets with a qualified custodian — does not apply to exempt family offices. You can self-custody your family's Bitcoin without any regulatory requirement to use an institutional custodian.
This is the correct answer for the vast majority of single-family offices. It does not mean self-custody is always the right choice — it means the regulatory requirement does not force your hand. You choose based on operational and strategic factors, not compliance necessity.
Multi-Family Offices and RIA-Registered Structures
Multi-family offices that manage assets for clients outside the family are typically registered investment advisers subject to the SEC custody rule. For those structures, Bitcoin held on behalf of clients must be held with a qualified custodian unless a specific exception applies. A qualified custodian for Bitcoin means: an OCC-chartered bank (Anchorage Digital), a state-chartered trust company (BitGo Trust, Fidelity Digital Assets, Coinbase Custody), or a regulated broker-dealer with Bitcoin custody capability.
Standard cryptocurrency exchanges — even large, reputable ones — do not qualify. Self-custody multisig does not qualify. Collaborative custody providers like Unchained and Casa do not qualify. If your structure requires a qualified custodian, the choice set is meaningfully narrowed.
The "Directed Trustee" Structure and Custody
When Bitcoin is held in a trust with a professional institutional trustee, the trustee's fiduciary duties create implicit custody requirements. A directed trustee who takes direction from a trust protector can use a qualified custodian selected by the protector — this is the most flexible structure for Bitcoin-holding trusts. See our analysis of the Bitcoin directed trust structure for the mechanics that make this work.
ERISA and Pension Plan Complications
If your family office manages ERISA-governed assets (defined benefit plans, certain 401(k) arrangements), the custody requirement is particularly strict, and current Department of Labor guidance creates significant friction for Bitcoin. Most family offices keep Bitcoin outside of ERISA-governed accounts for this reason — the compliance overhead is disproportionate to the benefit at current adoption levels. This is an evolving regulatory area that warrants ongoing monitoring.
How to Evaluate a Bitcoin Custodian: Eight Critical Criteria
Before any custodian profile, understand the evaluation framework. Custodian marketing materials are designed to obscure tradeoffs, not reveal them. The questions that matter are operational and adversarial — what happens when something goes wrong?
The Eight Criteria That Actually Matter
- 1. Regulatory Standing: OCC bank charter vs. state trust charter vs. exchange license vs. no license. This determines qualified custodian status and the depth of regulatory oversight.
- 2. Key Management Architecture: How are keys generated? Who has access? What is the threshold for transaction authorization? Where are keys stored physically? What HSM infrastructure is used?
- 3. Cold Storage Percentage: What percentage of assets is in offline cold storage? A custodian with 95%+ cold storage has fundamentally different risk than one with 80%.
- 4. Insurance Coverage: Total coverage limit, named insurer, trigger events, what is excluded. Not the marketing one-pager — the actual policy summary.
- 5. Bankruptcy Remoteness: Are client assets legally segregated from the custodian's own balance sheet? Are they held in trust, or as a liability of the custodian? Can they be rehypothecated?
- 6. SOC 2 Type II Certification: Has an independent auditor verified the custodian's security controls over time? Type II (over 6+ months) is meaningfully stronger than Type I (point in time).
- 7. Estate and Succession Protocols: What documentation does the custodian require to transfer assets to heirs? What is the timeline? Has the custodian actually processed estate claims? Are there dedicated estate protocols?
- 8. Redemption Speed and Access: How quickly can you access your Bitcoin? Is there a signing delay (security feature)? What are the SLAs for cold storage withdrawals vs. hot wallet? What is the process for large withdrawals?
Qualified Custodians: Deep Dives
Six institutions represent the primary qualified custodian options for family offices in 2026. Each has a distinct regulatory profile, security architecture, and use case fit.
Anchorage Digital
Anchorage Digital holds the only federal charter granted to a crypto-native institution — it is a national bank regulated by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. This is the highest regulatory bar in the US digital asset custody landscape. No other crypto-native custodian has achieved it. The OCC charter means Anchorage is subject to the same regulatory scrutiny as JPMorgan or Bank of America, with the full compliance infrastructure that implies: regular OCC examinations, capital requirements, and the imprimatur of the most prestigious bank regulatory body in the world.
For family offices where regulatory optics matter — where the custody arrangement will be reviewed by institutional LPs, endowments, pension fund trustees, or legal counsel who may not be Bitcoin-native — Anchorage is frequently the only defensible answer. The question "is your custodian a federally chartered bank?" produces a yes/no answer, and Anchorage is the only yes in crypto-native custody. The tradeoff: Anchorage is not a concierge service. Onboarding reflects the rigor of a federally chartered institution. Minimum AUM is meaningfully high. Service is institutional in the operational sense of that word.
- Regulatory standing: OCC-chartered national bank — the highest US regulatory bar for crypto custody
- Security model: Biometric hardware security modules (HSMs), multi-party authorization, institutionally-designed cold storage, OCC-supervised security framework, regular third-party audits
- Insurance: Crime and professional liability coverage; specifics under NDA with institutional clients — confirm directly
- Minimum AUM: ~$10M+; institutional onboarding process with KYB documentation requirements commensurate with a bank
- SOC 2: Type II certified
- Trust/LLC compatibility: Yes — handles complex entity structures with appropriate regulatory documentation
- Estate protocols: Institutional estate processes requiring death certificate, letters testamentary, and successor trustee/executor documentation; typical institutional timelines
- Best for: Family offices where regulatory compliance is paramount — family foundations with institutional investors, multi-family offices with LP relationships requiring OCC-level oversight, situations where the custodian's regulatory standing will be audited by third parties
Coinbase Custody / Coinbase Prime
Coinbase Prime is Coinbase's institutional platform, encompassing Bitcoin custody through Coinbase Custody Trust Company (a New York state-chartered limited purpose trust company) alongside trading, lending, and portfolio management services. By AUM, Coinbase is the largest institutional Bitcoin custodian in the world — it custodies a substantial portion of all Bitcoin spot ETF assets, including a large portion of BlackRock's IBIT holdings. That scale has a practical implication: Coinbase's custody infrastructure is the most operationally battle-tested in the industry, having processed the institutional onboarding demands of the ETF launch and sustained the scrutiny of the largest asset managers in the world.
Coinbase Prime is the natural choice for family offices that need deep liquidity alongside custody — the ability to execute large transactions with minimal slippage, access to over-the-counter block trading, and lending facilities against Bitcoin positions. The reporting infrastructure is institutional grade. The minimum AUM for Prime is typically $500K, making it accessible at family office scale. The tradeoff: Coinbase, despite its regulatory standing, carries the reputational risk of being a publicly traded company with its own regulatory battles — a risk Anchorage's bank charter mitigates. Coinbase also faced intense scrutiny from the SEC prior to the regulatory environment shift in 2025; the current environment is considerably more favorable.
- Regulatory standing: New York state-chartered limited purpose trust company; qualified custodian; publicly traded (NASDAQ: COIN)
- Security model: 98%+ cold storage, geographically distributed key storage, multi-approval workflows, SOC 2 Type II certified
- Insurance: Commercial crime coverage; historically disclosed at $320M+ for cold storage; confirm current limits directly
- Minimum AUM: ~$500K for Prime institutional access; lower tiers available
- SOC 2: Type II certified
- Trust/LLC compatibility: Yes — full entity account structure; used extensively by ETF sponsors holding assets in trust
- Estate protocols: Standard institutional estate procedures; Coinbase Prime has dedicated institutional support teams who manage estate and succession processes for qualified clients
- Best for: Family offices needing liquidity + custody on a single platform; those requiring deep trading infrastructure alongside cold storage; ETF-adjacent institutional strategies
Copper
Copper is a London-headquartered digital asset custodian that has built its institutional infrastructure around multi-party computation (MPC) technology rather than traditional hardware wallet multisig. MPC distributes key shares across multiple geographic locations and institutional parties such that no single key or key shard is ever in one place — the key is never assembled. This is architecturally distinct from multisig Bitcoin custody and has meaningful security and regulatory implications. Copper is regulated by the UK's FCA and is a natural fit for family offices with European structures, non-US beneficiaries, or assets held across multiple jurisdictions.
For global families — those with principal residences, legal structures, or beneficiaries across the EU, UK, Middle East, or Asia — Copper's European regulatory standing and geographic key distribution infrastructure is frequently a better fit than US-centric institutional custodians. Copper also provides ClearLoop, an off-exchange settlement network that allows families to trade on exchanges without Bitcoin leaving Copper's custody — a meaningful security upgrade over traditional exchange custody.
- Regulatory standing: FCA-regulated in the UK; compliant across major European jurisdictions; developing additional regulatory registrations
- Security model: MPC-based key sharding, no single point of key compromise, geographically distributed key shards, institutional operational controls
- Insurance: Crime and professional indemnity coverage through Lloyd's; confirm current limits and structure directly
- Minimum AUM: Institutional minimums; typically appropriate for $5M+ positions
- SOC 2: Third-party security audits; confirm current certification status
- Trust/LLC compatibility: Yes — international entity structures including trusts, foundations, and family investment vehicles across European and offshore jurisdictions
- Estate protocols: Institutional estate processes; particularly well-suited for complex cross-border estate situations
- Best for: Global family offices with European presence, non-US beneficiaries, or assets in multiple jurisdictions; families who want the architectural security of MPC over traditional multisig
BitGo Trust Company
BitGo is the institutional Bitcoin custodian with the longest track record — founded in 2013, pioneering multi-signature security before it was an industry standard, and processing a significant fraction of all on-chain Bitcoin volume for institutional clients. BitGo Trust Company is a South Dakota-chartered trust company, a qualified custodian under most regulatory frameworks. Its insurance coverage is among the largest disclosed in the industry: up to $700M through a consortium of insurers including Lloyd's of London syndicates, covering theft and loss from both hot and cold storage. The SOC 2 Type II certification has been maintained continuously across multiple audit periods.
BitGo's reporting infrastructure is particularly mature — sub-account by legal entity, transaction-level cost basis tracking, integration with institutional accounting systems, and API access for custom reporting. For family offices with multiple legal entities (an operating trust, a dynasty trust, a charitable remainder trust) holding Bitcoin across separate accounts, BitGo's sub-account architecture is meaningfully better than most alternatives. The tradeoff is pure counterparty concentration: your Bitcoin is held by BitGo, and while their track record and insurance coverage are strong, the absence of key sovereignty is the fundamental constraint of any institutional custodian relationship.
- Regulatory standing: South Dakota-chartered trust company; qualified custodian for most SEC, state, and institutional purposes
- Security model: Multi-party approval workflows, HSM-based key management, 98%+ cold storage, geographically distributed storage, SOC 2 Type II audited continuously
- Insurance: Up to $700M through Lloyd's consortium and other institutional insurers; crime and theft coverage for both hot and cold storage
- Minimum AUM: Typically $1M+ for institutional access; negotiated pricing at $10M+
- SOC 2: Type II certified — the most sustained SOC 2 track record in crypto custody
- Trust/LLC compatibility: Yes — sub-account by legal entity is a core feature; used extensively by institutional trustees holding assets for multiple trust clients
- Estate protocols: Documented estate transfer procedures; the depth of institutional infrastructure means estate claims are processed through established legal and operational channels
- Best for: Family offices requiring a qualified custodian for regulatory compliance, handling Bitcoin across multiple legal entities requiring sub-account segregation, or requiring insurance coverage above $100M; institutional trustees with Bitcoin-holding clients
Fidelity Digital Assets
Fidelity Digital Assets is the institutional Bitcoin custody and trading subsidiary of Fidelity Investments, the firm that manages $4+ trillion in assets for institutional and retail clients. Fidelity began developing its Bitcoin custody infrastructure in 2018 — before most traditional financial institutions acknowledged Bitcoin as a real asset class — and launched institutional custody services in 2019. The custody vehicle is a New Hampshire state-chartered trust company, making it a qualified custodian under most regulatory frameworks, backed by Fidelity's institutional compliance and legal infrastructure.
Fidelity Digital Assets occupies a unique niche: it is the bridge product for family offices that already run their entire portfolio on Fidelity's institutional platform and want to add a Bitcoin allocation without migrating custody to a crypto-native custodian. For those families, the reporting integration is seamless, the relationship management infrastructure is already in place, and the regulatory standing is unimpeachable. For Bitcoin-native families building custody architecture from first principles, Fidelity Digital Assets is rarely the optimal answer — it is a traditional financial institution that has built Bitcoin custody to serve existing institutional clients, not to maximize Bitcoin's unique properties.
- Regulatory standing: New Hampshire state-chartered trust company; operates under Fidelity's institutional regulatory umbrella; qualified custodian
- Security model: Proprietary cold storage infrastructure, institutional key management, enterprise-grade operational controls; specific architecture details proprietary
- Insurance: Covered under Fidelity's institutional insurance programs; specific Bitcoin coverage limits available to institutional clients under NDA
- Minimum AUM: Typically $1M+ for institutional relationship; minimums may vary based on existing Fidelity institutional relationship
- SOC 2: Third-party audited; confirm current certification with relationship manager
- Trust/LLC compatibility: Yes — full entity account structure consistent with Fidelity's broader institutional capabilities
- Estate protocols: Standard Fidelity institutional estate procedures; the depth of Fidelity's wealth management infrastructure means robust estate transfer processes
- Best for: Family offices with existing Fidelity institutional relationships wanting integrated Bitcoin custody on the same platform as their equity and fixed income portfolio; family office CFOs who need Bitcoin on the same reporting system as the rest of the balance sheet
Kingdom Trust
Kingdom Trust is a Kentucky-chartered trust company with a distinct specialty: self-directed IRA (SDIRA) custody, including Bitcoin and other digital assets held inside retirement accounts. For family offices managing Bitcoin allocations inside SDIRAs — a structure that can provide powerful tax deferral for multigenerational wealth — Kingdom Trust is one of the few qualified custodians that has built specifically for this use case. The regulatory complexity of Bitcoin inside retirement accounts is substantial, and Kingdom Trust's specialization means its operational procedures and documentation requirements are calibrated for exactly that context.
Kingdom Trust is not the right custodian for large direct Bitcoin holdings outside of retirement accounts — there are better options for that use case. But for the specific scenario of $500K–$5M of Bitcoin inside an SDIRA as part of a broader family wealth plan, Kingdom Trust's combination of regulatory standing and SDIRA operational expertise is difficult to replicate. Note that IRS and DOL rules governing Bitcoin in retirement accounts remain an evolving area; the suitability of SDIRA Bitcoin strategies depends heavily on current guidance.
- Regulatory standing: Kentucky state-chartered trust company; qualified custodian; SDIRA specialist with IRS-compliant operational procedures
- Security model: Institutional custody infrastructure calibrated for retirement account asset holding; third-party audited
- Insurance: SIPC-equivalent coverage for retirement accounts where applicable; crime coverage; confirm current limits directly
- Minimum AUM: Lower minimums than most institutional custodians; accessible at sub-$500K positions
- SOC 2: Third-party audited; confirm current status
- Trust/LLC compatibility: Primarily for retirement account structures (SDIRA, Solo 401k); limited infrastructure for general trust or LLC custody outside retirement context
- Estate protocols: SDIRA estate procedures governed by IRS beneficiary designation rules; specific procedures for inherited IRA claims from Bitcoin SDIRAs
- Best for: Family offices using Bitcoin as part of an SDIRA strategy for tax deferral; situations where the specific regulatory requirements of retirement account custody are the primary driver
Multisig and Collaborative Custody Options
The three leading multisig and collaborative custody providers represent meaningfully different philosophies about how key sovereignty and operational support should be balanced. None are qualified custodians in the regulatory sense — that is by design. Their value proposition is precisely that they preserve the family's key control.
Unchained Capital
Unchained occupies a structurally unique position in the custody landscape. In Unchained's collaborative custody model, the family holds two keys in a 2-of-3 multisig arrangement and Unchained holds one key. Unchained cannot spend funds without the family's participation — ever. The family can spend funds without Unchained's participation in an emergency. This architecture preserves the core Bitcoin sovereignty principle while providing meaningful operational infrastructure.
What makes Unchained the gold standard for estate planning specifically is that this architecture maps elegantly onto inheritance. Unchained designs its vault products with succession explicitly in mind: heirs can be designated as key holders for one of the family's two keys, creating a natural succession path without requiring heirs to be Bitcoin-technical or to find a seed phrase hidden somewhere in a decedent's estate. When the principal passes, the heir holds one key, Unchained holds a second key, and the estate attorney provides documentation — a clean, legally-supported claim process that does not require any one party to hold all the keys. The Unchained key acts as a circuit breaker: heirs cannot be locked out because of the death of the sole key holder, but no one party can access funds without consent.
Unchained also provides Bitcoin lending against custody positions — a meaningful feature for family offices that want to access liquidity without selling Bitcoin, without moving Bitcoin to an exchange, and without surrendering custody.
- Key architecture: 2-of-3 multisig; client holds 2 keys, Unchained holds 1; client can always spend independently with 2-of-3
- Insurance: Crime coverage through a Lloyd's-backed policy; details available on request
- Minimum: No minimum for standard vaults; institutional vault pricing available at scale
- Regulatory standing: Not a qualified custodian; appropriate for family offices not subject to RIA custody rules
- Trust/LLC compatibility: Yes — explicitly designed for trusts, LLCs, and family estate structures; key holder designation built for inheritance
- Estate protocols: Designed from the ground up for inheritance; heir can be a designated key holder, claim with death certificate and estate documentation; Unchained's estate protocol is the most operationally refined in the collaborative custody space
- Bitcoin lending: Yes — collateralized Bitcoin loans against custody positions without leaving Unchained's custody framework
- Best for: Families prioritizing key sovereignty, generational holding, and estate planning clarity; the definitive answer for inheritance-focused custody architecture
Casa
Casa is the premium concierge multisig product for individuals and families who want key sovereignty without managing a DIY technical setup. Casa's flagship offering at the Platinum tier is a 3-of-5 multisig, with keys distributed across multiple hardware devices held by the client and one key held by Casa (which cannot spend independently). The differentiation is service: white-glove onboarding with a dedicated security advisor, annual key health checks, and an inheritance protocol specifically designed for heirs who may have no Bitcoin technical knowledge.
This last point — heirs who are not Bitcoin-technical — is more important than most families initially recognize. The custody arrangement your heirs interact with after you are gone needs to work for people who may never have touched a hardware wallet. Casa's inheritance protocol walks heirs through the recovery process with dedicated support, without requiring them to understand the technical mechanics. For families where the principal is Bitcoin-native but heirs are not, this service differential is significant.
- Key architecture: 3-of-5 multisig at Platinum; client holds multiple keys across multiple devices, Casa holds one; client can spend independently with sufficient keys
- Insurance: Crime and theft coverage; limits available upon inquiry
- Minimum: No AUM minimum; annual subscription fee by vault tier
- Regulatory standing: Not a qualified custodian; appropriate for individual and single-family office use
- Trust/LLC compatibility: Yes, with documentation — entity accounts available
- Estate protocols: Dedicated inheritance support; designed for non-technical heirs; casa holds one key throughout, providing a recovery mechanism even when estate is being sorted
- Best for: Families with significant Bitcoin holdings ($500K–$20M+) who prioritize concierge service, inheritance support for non-technical heirs, and key sovereignty; particularly strong for principals who want a turnkey sovereign custody solution without DIY complexity
Specter Solutions
Specter Solutions is the open-source multisig coordination platform for technically sophisticated families or their Bitcoin advisors who want to run a fully self-managed multisig setup with maximum control over every component. Specter is software, not a service provider — there is no company holding a key, no counterparty, no subscription. The family runs Specter on their own hardware (typically a dedicated air-gapped device or a Raspberry Pi), connects their hardware wallets directly, and coordinates multisig transactions without any third-party involvement.
This is the maximum sovereignty end of the collaborative multisig category. It eliminates all counterparty risk — including the risk of Unchained or Casa as service providers. It also eliminates all operational support. There is no helpdesk to call when a hardware wallet fails, no key recovery service, no estate protocol. The operational burden is entirely on the family and their advisors. Specter is appropriate for: families with a dedicated Bitcoin technical advisor who will manage the custody infrastructure; family offices that have the internal technical capacity to operate and maintain the setup; or situations where even the minimal counterparty risk of a collaborative provider like Unchained is unacceptable.
- Key architecture: Any multisig configuration supported by Bitcoin script — 2-of-3, 3-of-5, or custom; fully family-controlled
- Insurance: None provided — family must arrange independently
- Minimum: None — open source software
- Regulatory standing: Not a custodian of any kind; pure software tool
- Trust/LLC compatibility: Yes — the family controls the setup and can configure it for any entity structure
- Estate protocols: None provided — must be designed entirely by the family and their advisors; key distribution to heirs must be planned and documented independently
- Best for: Technically sophisticated families or those with dedicated Bitcoin technical advisors; situations requiring maximum sovereignty with no counterparty exposure whatsoever; families who view even Unchained's key escrow as an unacceptable dependency
Insurance: What's Covered, What's Not
Bitcoin custody insurance is perhaps the most misrepresented topic in the institutional custody space. Every custodian claims "insurance" — almost none of them provide the same type, quality, or scope of coverage. Understanding the actual risk coverage is essential before signing a custody agreement.
What Bitcoin Custody Insurance Actually Covers
Most institutional Bitcoin custody insurance is classified as specie insurance — a category of insurance originally designed for physical valuables like gold, diamonds, and fine art held in vaults. Specie insurance covers the physical loss or theft of the underlying asset. In the Bitcoin context, this means: unauthorized access to private keys resulting in theft, physical destruction of key storage media, or certain types of cybercrime attacks.
What specie insurance almost universally does NOT cover:
- Market value decline — your Bitcoin losing value is not an insured event under any policy
- Client error — sending Bitcoin to the wrong address, losing your own key, or approving a fraudulent transaction at your instruction
- Custodian insolvency — if the custodian goes bankrupt and client assets were not properly segregated, insurance does not necessarily make you whole
- Insider theft in all cases — some policies explicitly exclude theft by the custodian's employees (check for "employee dishonesty" riders)
- Regulatory seizure — if regulators seize the custodian's assets, insurance does not provide recovery
- Smart contract hacks (for non-Bitcoin assets) — coverage is typically specific to the asset class insured
Lloyd's of London Syndicates: The Industry Standard
The credible coverage for institutional Bitcoin custody comes from Lloyd's of London syndicates — the same market that has insured physical gold vaults, oil tankers, and other high-value assets for over 200 years. Lloyd's syndicates bring: underwriting discipline (they ask hard questions before issuing coverage), institutional reputation (a named Lloyd's policy is verifiable), and the capacity to cover very large positions (individual policies up to $700M+ for major custodians).
When evaluating custodian insurance, ask specifically: Is the coverage from a named Lloyd's syndicate? What is the syndicate name and policy number (which you can verify independently)? What is the total coverage limit for cold storage vs. hot storage? Does the coverage extend to assets held in your specific custody structure, or only to the custodian's proprietary cold storage?
Insurance at Collaborative Custody Providers
Unchained and Casa both carry crime coverage through Lloyd's-backed policies. However, the coverage structure is different from institutional custodians: because the family holds the majority of keys, the insurance is primarily covering the provider's key (and operational liability) rather than the entire position. A family office with $10M in Unchained collaborative custody should not assume they have $10M of insurance coverage — they should ask specifically what the policy covers in their arrangement.
Self-Custody Insurance
For families using full self-custody multisig, there is no custodian-provided insurance. The family must arrange independently. Options exist: some specialty insurers will cover hardware wallets and seed phrases for high-net-worth individuals. The premiums are not trivial and the coverage limits are typically much lower than institutional coverage. For very large positions ($10M+), the cost of self-custody insurance may approach the cost of institutional custody fees — this is a real economic tradeoff that should be modeled explicitly.
Regulatory Risk: Lessons from Celsius, Bittrex, and Genesis
The 2022-2023 crypto market collapse provided the most comprehensive stress test of digital asset custody arrangements in the industry's history. The results were instructive — and in many cases, catastrophic for clients who chose custody based on marketing materials rather than regulatory structure.
The Lessons
Celsius ($12B+ in client losses): Celsius was not a custodian — it was a lending platform that promised yield on Bitcoin deposits. But many clients treated it as a custody solution because it held their Bitcoin. When Celsius filed for bankruptcy in July 2022, clients discovered that their Bitcoin was not held in segregated accounts — it was commingled with Celsius's operational assets and lent to third parties. Clients became unsecured creditors of the bankruptcy estate, not owners of segregated Bitcoin. The lesson: any arrangement that promises yield on your Bitcoin is not custody. The moment Bitcoin leaves your custody for a yield-generating purpose, you are a creditor, not a custodian relationship.
Bittrex ($57M in client assets frozen): The SEC enforcement action against Bittrex in 2023 resulted in the exchange's US operations being shut down. Clients with assets on Bittrex faced a months-long claims process to recover their funds. No client lost Bitcoin permanently — Bittrex was an exchange, not a custodian, and assets were eventually returned. But the operational disruption and timeline of recovery demonstrated that even a regulatory action against a solvent platform creates meaningful friction for asset recovery.
Genesis ($3.5B+ in creditor claims): Genesis Capital's bankruptcy in January 2023 affected Gemini Earn users who had lent Bitcoin to Genesis through Gemini's platform. Again: users who deposited into Earn were creditors, not custody clients. The distinction is fundamental and was not apparent to many users at the time.
How to Evaluate Regulatory Risk in a Custody Provider
The critical questions:
- Are client assets legally segregated? Client Bitcoin must be held in trust or in separately identifiable accounts, not commingled with the custodian's operational assets. Ask for confirmation in writing and verify in the custody agreement.
- Is the custodian rehypothecating client assets? Any custodian that lends client Bitcoin is not providing pure custody — it is introducing credit risk. Pure custody means the Bitcoin is where you put it, not deployed elsewhere for the custodian's benefit.
- What is the custodian's bankruptcy remoteness? In a trust company structure, client assets are held in trust — legally separated from the custodian's balance sheet. In a bankruptcy, they are not available to creditors of the trust company. Confirm this structure explicitly.
- What is the regulatory history? Has the custodian received any regulatory warnings, Wells notices, or enforcement actions? What is the current regulatory relationship with primary regulators?
Any arrangement where your Bitcoin generates yield is not custody. Celsius, BlockFi, and Genesis were lending platforms that accepted Bitcoin deposits — their clients were creditors, not custody clients. A qualified custodian holds your Bitcoin and earns a custody fee. It does not lend your Bitcoin. If a "custodian" is offering you yield, the correct mental model is that you are making a loan, not entering a custody arrangement.
Custody and Estate Planning: The Intersection That Most Advisors Miss
The moment a family office engages with Bitcoin custody, it is simultaneously making decisions that will determine whether heirs can access the Bitcoin at death. Most families — and most advisors — treat custody and estate planning as separate decisions. This is the most expensive mistake in Bitcoin wealth planning.
Our comprehensive Bitcoin estate planning guide covers the full legal framework in depth. Here we focus specifically on the custody-estate planning intersection: how does each custody architecture perform at the point of estate transfer?
Claiming Bitcoin from an Institutional Custodian at Death
At an institutional qualified custodian, the estate claim process follows a pattern similar to traditional financial assets. What the heir or executor typically needs:
- Certified copy of the death certificate
- Letters testamentary (for estate claims) or trust certification (for trust-held assets)
- Government-issued ID for all authorized claimants
- Any additional documentation required by the custodian's estate protocol
- For entities: updated entity documentation reflecting successor management authority
The process at each custodian differs in important ways:
Anchorage Digital: As a federally chartered bank, Anchorage has formal estate transfer procedures governed by OCC regulations. The process is rigorous and well-documented, but the OCC-level compliance requirements mean that estate claims require complete legal documentation. Timeline: weeks to months depending on estate complexity.
Coinbase Prime: Coinbase has processed estate claims with increasing volume as Bitcoin adoption has grown. Their institutional Prime clients have dedicated relationship managers who can facilitate the estate process. The practical timeline and documentation requirements are more similar to traditional brokerage estate claims than crypto-native custody.
BitGo Trust: As a trust company, BitGo's estate claim processes are calibrated to institutional trustee relationships. The documentation requirements are well-defined; the operational timeline reflects the institutional nature of the relationship.
In all institutional custody cases, the key point is: the heir does not need Bitcoin technical knowledge. The claim is entirely legal and administrative. The custodian holds the keys and delivers the Bitcoin to the rightful heir through the legal estate process. This is a meaningful estate planning benefit of institutional custody — it abstracts away the technical Bitcoin complexity from the inheritance event.
Claiming Bitcoin from Unchained at Death: The Gold Standard Architecture
Unchained's collaborative custody model enables a custody-estate planning integration that institutional custodians cannot match. The architecture:
- The principal holds two keys in a 2-of-3 multisig
- Unchained holds one key (cannot spend independently)
- The heir is designated as the successor key holder for one of the principal's keys
- The trust or estate documents specify the custody arrangement and heir's authority
At death: the heir holds one key (received as part of the estate), Unchained holds a second key. The heir presents death certificate and appropriate estate documentation to Unchained. Unchained co-signs transactions with the heir using its key. The heir can access the Bitcoin without needing the second key — which may have been lost or destroyed — because Unchained's key + the heir's key = 2-of-3.
This architecture has several properties that institutional custody cannot replicate: (1) the heir has direct Bitcoin access, not a legal claim on a custodian's balance sheet; (2) the process works even if other keys are lost; (3) the sovereignty of the Bitcoin is preserved — no institutional counterparty holds the entire key set; (4) the heir's claim is cryptographic and legal simultaneously, not dependent on the custodian's operational processes alone.
Self-Custody Inheritance: Why Most Plans Fail
Full self-custody multisig inheritance planning fails more often than practitioners admit, for predictable reasons:
- Heirs don't know where the keys are. The principal secured the seed phrases thoroughly — perhaps too thoroughly. Heirs cannot find them.
- Heirs can't use the keys they find. A hardware wallet and a 12-word seed phrase are not intuitive tools for a grieving heir who has never held Bitcoin.
- The key holder structure wasn't documented. A 2-of-3 multisig where only one person knew where all the keys were effectively becomes a 1-of-1 at death.
- Procedures were not tested. The inheritance plan was designed but never rehearsed — the heir finds out at the worst possible moment that the procedure doesn't work as expected.
A properly designed self-custody inheritance plan must include: documented key locations in a sealed envelope held by the estate attorney, a hardware wallet heir tutorial that the heir has actually read and practiced, a named Bitcoin-competent advisor who can assist the heir with the technical process, and tested procedures that have been rehearsed at least once before the principal's death.
The Directed Trust Structure for Bitcoin Custody
The most legally robust structure for holding Bitcoin across generations combines the Bitcoin directed trust with either collaborative multisig or institutional custody. In a directed trust, the investment trustee (which can be a family member or professional) has authority over investment decisions including custody arrangements. The administrative trustee handles distributions and compliance. This separation allows a Bitcoin-competent investment trustee to maintain a sophisticated custody architecture without requiring the administrative trustee to be Bitcoin-technical — an important design feature when planning for custody arrangements that will outlast any individual's involvement.
The Hybrid Approach: How Sophisticated Family Offices Structure Custody
After working through the tradeoffs of every custody model, sophisticated family offices reliably arrive at the same conclusion: no single custody solution is optimal for all uses of Bitcoin. The institutional custodian is not the right answer for generational holdings; self-custody multisig is not the right answer for operational liquidity. The hybrid approach splits the position accordingly.
The Operational Tranche: Institutional Custodian
Typically 20-30% of the family's total Bitcoin position. Held at a qualified institutional custodian — Coinbase Prime, BitGo Trust, or Fidelity Digital Assets for most US families. This tranche serves: liquidity for portfolio rebalancing; compliance with any regulatory requirements applicable to the family's structure; institutional reporting for the family's CPA and legal team; trading and transaction access; and lending collateral against an institutional balance sheet.
The custodian fee on the operational tranche is a cost of institutional infrastructure — analogous to what the family pays for custody of its equity and fixed income portfolio. The counterparty risk is real but bounded: the position is sized such that a custodian failure is material but not catastrophic.
The Generational Tranche: Self-Custody Multisig
Typically 70-80% of the total Bitcoin position. Held in self-custody multisig — Unchained's collaborative architecture for most families, pure DIY multisig for the most technically sophisticated. This tranche is designed to be held for 20-50+ years. It never moves to an exchange. Transactions require multiple keys and deliberate multi-party coordination. The custody architecture is stress-tested for the death or incapacity of the principal. Heirs have documented roles in the key structure.
The generational tranche is the Bitcoin that will fund the family's Bitcoin endowment — the perpetual savings vehicle that is not being managed for quarterly performance but for multigenerational wealth preservation. The custody architecture reflects this time horizon: maximum security, minimum counterparty risk, maximum sovereignty.
Why the Split Works Better Than Either Alone
A 100% institutional custody position optimizes for compliance and operational simplicity — but concentrates counterparty risk and pays custody fees forever on a generational holding. A 100% self-custody position maximizes sovereignty — but may not satisfy compliance requirements for the family's RIA-registered advisors and creates operational complexity for routine transactions.
The hybrid solves both: the institutional tranche satisfies compliance and provides operational access; the generational tranche eliminates counterparty risk on the bulk of the position and enables the sovereignty-native estate planning that Unchained's architecture enables. The two positions are managed independently with separate legal documentation, separate beneficiary structures, and separate operational procedures.
One underappreciated approach for family offices: Bitcoin mining allows you to accumulate Bitcoin directly into self-custody — bypassing the exchange custody chain entirely. The mined Bitcoin never passes through an institutional custodian or exchange; it arrives directly in a wallet you control. Combined with bonus depreciation and significant tax deductions available to Bitcoin miners, this is one of the most tax-efficient and sovereignty-preserving accumulation strategies available to family offices. Download our 36-question framework for evaluating Bitcoin mining infrastructure →
Custody Due Diligence: The Questions to Ask Any Custodian Before Signing
Before engaging any Bitcoin custodian — qualified institutional or collaborative multisig — conduct a structured due diligence process. The questions custodians answer without hesitation are more informative than their marketing materials. The questions they deflect reveal more than their answers.
- Can you provide the actual policy summary for your insurance coverage, including the insurer name, coverage limits, and a description of trigger events? (Not the marketing one-pager — the actual summary document.)
- Are client assets held in segregated accounts or commingled with your operational assets? Are client assets held in trust?
- Do you rehypothecate, lend, or otherwise deploy client Bitcoin for your own account or for third parties?
- What is the key recovery procedure if your organization ceases to exist? Can clients recover their Bitcoin independently?
- What documentation is required to open an account in the name of an irrevocable trust / LLC / FLP?
- What is your estate claim procedure? Can you walk me through the exact steps an heir or executor would take to claim assets from a deceased client's account?
- What is your SOC 2 Type II audit history? Who is your auditor and when was the last audit?
- Have you ever had a security incident involving client asset loss? If so, how was it handled and what was the outcome for affected clients?
A custodian that cannot answer these questions clearly and completely is not ready to hold a family office's generational Bitcoin position.
Design Your Family's Custody Architecture
The Bitcoin Family Office works with family offices to design custody architecture that integrates with your legal structures, estate plan, and tax strategy. We connect you with custodians, attorneys, and advisors who actually understand Bitcoin at the institutional level.
Work With Our Advisory TeamFrequently Asked Questions
What is a qualified custodian for Bitcoin family offices?
A qualified custodian is a regulated financial institution — OCC-chartered bank, state-chartered trust company, or broker-dealer — that meets SEC standards for holding client assets. For Bitcoin, Anchorage Digital (OCC-chartered national bank), BitGo Trust Company (South Dakota trust charter), Fidelity Digital Assets (New Hampshire trust charter), and Coinbase Custody Trust Company (New York trust charter) are the primary qualified custodians. Standard cryptocurrency exchanges do not meet the standard. Family offices registered as investment advisers must use a qualified custodian for client Bitcoin; single-family offices qualifying for the Dodd-Frank family office exemption are not subject to this requirement and may self-custody.
Is self-custody a legitimate option for a Bitcoin family office?
Yes — for single-family offices that are not registered as investment advisors and are managing only family assets. A properly structured 2-of-3 or 3-of-5 multisig setup with geographically distributed keys, documented security procedures, and regular operational testing can match or exceed institutional security while eliminating counterparty risk entirely. The necessary conditions: the family must have the operational discipline to maintain the protocol, there must be an airtight inheritance plan with heirs who have tested access to keys, and the regulatory structure must not require a qualified custodian. If those conditions hold, self-custody multisig is frequently superior to institutional custody for generational holdings.
How do I structure Bitcoin custody within an irrevocable trust?
The trust document must specify the custody arrangement with operational specificity — vague "digital assets" language fails in practice. Three models work: (1) An institutional qualified custodian holds the Bitcoin, the trustee has signing authority through the custodian's account — this is the cleanest for institutional trustees; (2) Collaborative multisig with keys distributed between the trustee, a provider like Unchained, and a co-trustee or attorney, with the key holder arrangement specified in the trust or an attached custody addendum; (3) Self-custody multisig where the trust document names key holders, specifies signing thresholds, and documents the succession procedure for each key. Work with an attorney who is Bitcoin-competent — generic digital asset trust language does not achieve operational custody clarity. Our Bitcoin estate planning guide covers the legal structure in detail.
What insurance should I look for in a Bitcoin custodian?
Look for: (1) Specie or crime insurance covering theft and loss in both hot and cold storage, with coverage limits meaningful to your position size — BitGo offers up to $700M, Coinbase historically disclosed $320M+; (2) A named Lloyd's of London syndicate or equivalent institutional insurer — not "insurance from an undisclosed carrier"; (3) Clarity on trigger events — some policies exclude insider theft, key mismanagement, or specific attack vectors; (4) Confirmation that coverage applies to your specific custody arrangement, not just the custodian's proprietary cold storage. Request the actual policy summary, not the marketing document. A custodian that won't provide this should not hold significant assets.
What happens to Bitcoin at an institutional custodian if the custodian is shut down by regulators?
The outcome depends entirely on whether client assets are legally segregated — and that segregation should be confirmed before choosing a custodian, not after a regulatory action is announced. For properly structured trust company custodians (BitGo Trust, Fidelity Digital Assets), client Bitcoin is held in trust — legally separated from the custodian's balance sheet and not available to creditors in a bankruptcy or regulatory receivership. Client assets should be recoverable through a receiver process, though the timeline can be months. The Celsius, Genesis, and BlockFi failures were not custody failures — those were lending platforms that commingled client assets. A true qualified custodian holds your Bitcoin in trust; you are not a creditor of the institution. Confirm this explicitly in your custody agreement.
How does Bitcoin custody transfer at death? What do heirs need to claim funds?
At an institutional custodian (Coinbase Prime, Anchorage, BitGo), heirs present: a certified death certificate, letters testamentary (estate claims) or trust certification (trust-held assets), government-issued ID, and any additional custodian-specific documentation. The process is legal and administrative — heirs do not need Bitcoin technical knowledge. At Unchained, the collaborative custody architecture is specifically designed for inheritance: a designated heir holds one of the family's two keys and works with Unchained's second key to complete transactions after presenting estate documentation. In self-custody multisig without careful planning, heirs often cannot access funds at all — the most common and preventable Bitcoin inheritance failure. The custody arrangement's estate protocol must be understood and documented before it is needed.
What is the hybrid custody approach and why do sophisticated family offices use it?
The hybrid approach holds Bitcoin in two separate custody arrangements: an operational tranche (typically 20-30% of the position) at a qualified institutional custodian for liquidity, compliance, and reporting; and a generational tranche (70-80%) in collaborative multisig — typically Unchained's architecture — for sovereignty, long-term security, and inheritance planning. The rationale: institutional custodians solve for compliance and operational access; collaborative multisig solves for generational security and estate planning. No single solution optimizes both. The two tranches have separate legal documentation, separate beneficiary structures, separate key holders, and separate operational procedures — they are managed as distinct custody arrangements serving distinct purposes.
Which Bitcoin custodian is best for a family office?
There is no single best custodian — the answer depends on regulatory structure, position size, estate planning priorities, and operational capacity. Anchorage Digital for the highest regulatory bar (OCC-chartered, mandatory for some institutional LP relationships). Coinbase Prime for largest institutional platform with deep liquidity. BitGo Trust for up to $700M insurance coverage and the strongest SOC 2 track record. Fidelity Digital Assets for families with existing Fidelity institutional relationships. Unchained Capital for the gold standard of sovereign custody with estate planning integration. Casa for white-glove concierge custody without surrendering keys. Copper for global families with European structures and non-US beneficiaries. Most sophisticated family offices use two custodians in a hybrid arrangement — one institutional, one collaborative multisig.
Bitcoin Mining: The Most Powerful Tax Strategy for Family Offices
Depreciation, OpEx deductions, and bonus depreciation can dramatically reduce your effective tax burden. Mining also lets you accumulate Bitcoin directly into self-custody — bypassing the exchange and institutional custody chain entirely. Learn how Abundant Mines structures institutional mining operations for maximum tax efficiency.
Explore Bitcoin Mining Tax Strategy →This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Custodian-specific details — insurance limits, minimum AUM, fee structures, and regulatory standing — change over time; verify directly with each provider before making custody decisions. Consult qualified legal, tax, and financial professionals for guidance specific to your situation and regulatory structure.