You hear about a friend unable to access their account. Or you read about another exchange collapse where customer funds vanished into a wallet nobody could trace. You still want exposure to Bitcoin and Ethereum, but the operational risk of setting up accounts on crypto exchanges, managing hot and cold wallets, and worrying about hacks is exactly the kind of weekend project you do not want.
Good news: you can put roughly $25,000 into crypto through your regular brokerage account using three spot ETFs that hold the actual coins for you. The funds are iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF (NASDAQ:IBIT), Fidelity Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund (NASDAQ:FBTC), and iShares Ethereum Trust ETF (NASDAQ:ETHA). No seed phrases. No KYC forms on offshore platforms. Just tickers in your portfolio.
The problem these ETFs actually solve
Direct crypto ownership means you become your own bank, custodian, and security team. Spot ETFs flip that model. The fund issuer hires a regulated custodian to hold the coins, and you hold shares of the fund in the same brokerage account where your retirement money already sits. If you want $25,000 of crypto exposure roughly weighted toward Bitcoin, the cleanest split is two Bitcoin funds for diversification at the issuer level (BlackRock and Fidelity) plus one Ethereum fund. You get the asset performance minus a small fee, and you skip the parts where money disappears.
IBIT: the BlackRock anchor
IBIT tracks the spot price of Bitcoin and is operated by BlackRock, the largest asset manager in the world. The fund’s net expense ratio is 0.33%, which means a $10,000 position costs you about $33 a year in fees. 99.93% of the portfolio sits in iShares Bitcoin Trust holdings, with a sliver of cash for operational liquidity. Since the spot Bitcoin ETF launch in January 2024, IBIT shares are up 28.35% on an adjusted basis, though the last twelve months have been brutal: the fund is down 43.71% over one year and 31.16% year to date as Bitcoin pulled back from its 2025 highs. For a core crypto allocation, BlackRock’s scale and Coinbase custody arrangement are the appeal.
FBTC: the cheaper Bitcoin sleeve
FBTC does the same job as IBIT, with two meaningful differences. First, the expense ratio is 0.25%, slightly cheaper than IBIT’s 0.33%. On a $10,000 sleeve that is about $25 a year in fees instead of $33, so you keep roughly $9,975 working for you annually. Second, Fidelity self-custodies the Bitcoin through Fidelity Digital Assets rather than outsourcing to a third party. If you already use Fidelity for your IRA or 401(k) rollover, holding FBTC inside the same account is frictionless. Performance tracks Bitcoin closely: shares are up 27.15% since the January 11, 2024 launch and down 44.67% over the past year, mirroring Bitcoin’s own 45.62% one-year drop to $60,347.60.
ETHA: your Ethereum exposure
Bitcoin is digital gold. Ethereum is the rails for smart contracts, stablecoins, and most of the on-chain financial activity that gets built on top of crypto. If you want both bets in your $25,000 allocation, ETHA is the spot Ethereum equivalent of IBIT, also run by BlackRock with Coinbase as custodian. Ethereum’s recent run has been rougher than Bitcoin’s: the underlying ETH is down 47.69% year to date, and ETHA shares reflect that, off 45.43% in 2026 and currently trading at $12.24. The fund launched in July 2024, so the track record is short, and shares are down 53.35% since inception. Sizing this as a smaller piece of your $25,000 (think $5,000) keeps the volatility in check while giving you exposure to the second-largest crypto asset.
The real trade-off
Spot crypto ETFs solve the custody problem, but they do not solve the volatility problem. Bitcoin is down 20.11% over the past month alone, and Ethereum is down 23.15%. You also pay an annual fee that direct holders do not, and you cannot use the shares to interact with DeFi protocols or earn staking rewards on ETH inside the fund wrapper.
Over ten years Bitcoin is up 8,619.03% and Ethereum is up 12,604.5%, so the long-term thesis remains intact, but the path is jagged. For a reader who wants the asset without the exchange horror stories, IBIT, FBTC, and ETHA do exactly what the headline promised: $25,000 of crypto exposure that lives in your brokerage account, custodied by institutions that file audits.
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