Choosing between Strike and Surge Credit requires evaluating total cost, custody risk, and which platform aligns with your borrowing profile. Strike uses custodial with 7.49%–10.5% APR, while Surge Credit uses collaborative multisig (taproot vault, 3-of-4 signer network) with 6.9% variable / 9.9% fixed APR.
On a $250,000 loan, Surge Credit costs $24,750 in the first year versus $25,000 at Strike, a difference of $250. Surge Credit charges no origination fee, so the only cost is interest.
The custody difference is material. Surge Credit uses collaborative multisig (taproot vault, 3-of-4 signer network), which means your Bitcoin requires multiple key holders to coordinate, reducing single-point-of-failure risk. Strike uses custodial. In a platform insolvency scenario, Surge Credit borrowers' collateral is protected by the multisig architecture, while Strike borrowers may face creditor claims.
Strike is the better fit for borrowers who are borrowing $10,000 or more and are comfortable with custodial lending. Surge Credit is the better fit for borrowers who need smaller loans or more flexible access.
Key details to be aware of: Strike: Monthly-payment interest rates shown (10.5% = 11. Surge Credit: Revolving BTC-backed USDC credit line on Base — launched 2026, early-stage. Variable rate from 6.