Key Takeaways
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- Vanguard will allow ETFs and mutual funds primarily holding Bitcoin, Ether, XRP and Solana to trade on its platform starting Tuesday.
- This marks a major reversal of its longstanding skepticism toward digital assets.
- The shift opens crypto access to over 50 million brokerage clients overseeing $11 trillion in assets.
- Vanguard still won’t launch its own crypto products and will exclude meme-coin–linked funds.
What Happened?
Vanguard, historically the most crypto-averse among the major asset managers, will now allow trading of ETFs and mutual funds that hold select cryptocurrencies. This includes exposure to Bitcoin, Ether, XRP and Solana. The move follows persistent pressure from retail and institutional investors — and the runaway success of spot Bitcoin ETFs since 2024, especially BlackRock’s IBIT, which peaked near $100 billion in assets.
The firm emphasized that crypto ETFs have proven liquid and resilient through volatile markets, and that servicing them is now operationally mature enough to support at scale.
Why It Matters?
This is a watershed moment for digital assets. Vanguard manages or administers over $11 trillion, and its brokerage serves more than 50 million clients. Opening the door to crypto exposure dramatically expands the total addressable market for regulated digital-asset wrappers.
For crypto markets, this is psychological fuel: the last major holdout in traditional finance has capitulated to client demand. The decision also signals that crypto ETFs are now seen as comparable to other “non-core” asset classes like gold — investable, regulated, and structurally sound.
What’s Next?
Vanguard will support most regulated crypto ETFs and mutual funds but will not create its own digital inventory. Its leadership remains cautious, especially around speculative coins. Still, the addition of crypto ETFs to its platform will likely accelerate fund inflows, normalize crypto exposure in diversified portfolios and pressure remaining institutional skeptics.
Watch for:
- Potential inflow spikes into IBIT and other leading spot ETFs.
- Whether Vanguard’s move triggers similar shifts by other conservative brokerages.
- Regulatory shifts as crypto products become further embedded in mainstream financial platforms.










