Babylon Labs and Ledger have teamed up to make native Bitcoin more useful in decentralized finance without asking users to give up control of their coins.
Key Takeaways
- Babylon Labs has integrated Ledger support into its Trustless Bitcoin Vaults, also called BTCVaults.
- The setup lets users use Bitcoin as DeFi collateral while keeping assets on the Bitcoin network and under self custody.
- Ledger Clear Signing shows full transaction details on the device screen before approval, adding an extra layer of transparency and security.
- The move reflects growing interest in self custodial vaults as more crypto users look for ways to earn yield or access financial tools without relying on custodians or wrapped assets.
What Happened?
Babylon Labs announced a new partnership with hardware wallet maker Ledger to bring native Ledger signer support to its BTCVaults infrastructure. The integration allows users to approve vault transactions directly on a Ledger device, giving Bitcoin holders a more secure way to put their assets to work in digital finance.
The core idea is simple. Users can deploy native BTC as collateral in decentralized applications without using a custodian, a bridge, or a wrapped version of Bitcoin. Instead, the assets remain on Bitcoin and are controlled by programmable onchain conditions.
What happens when trustless Bitcoin vaults meet the worldβs most widely used self-custody hardware ecosystem?
β Babylon (@babylonlabs_io) March 10, 2026
Babylon and @Ledger integration brings native Ledger signer support to Babylon Trustless Bitcoin Vaults.
With Ledger Clear Signing, 8 million users will be able to⦠pic.twitter.com/629SZECIHL
How the Integration Works?
Under the new setup, Ledger devices serve as the secure signing layer for BTCVault interactions. Rather than signing through a browser or software wallet alone, users can review and approve actions from their hardware wallet.
A key part of the integration is Ledgerβs Clear Signing feature. This displays human readable transaction details on the device screen before approval. In practice, that helps reduce the risk of users signing unclear or malicious transactions, which remains one of the biggest security concerns in crypto.
Babylon co-founder David Tse said the partnership targets a long standing problem in the market. Tse said:
Ledger Chief Technology Officer Charles Guillemet also framed the move around ownership and security. Guillemet said:
Why This Matters for Bitcoin and DeFi?
The partnership is important because it pushes Bitcoin deeper into DeFi without changing its core custody model. For years, Bitcoin holders often had to rely on centralized services or wrapped tokens to access yield, lending, or collateral strategies. Babylon is trying to remove that compromise.
The company has built its business around what it calls trustless Bitcoin productivity. It previously launched a self custodial Bitcoin staking protocol that it says has already activated more than $10 billion worth of native BTC to help secure proof of stake chains, Layer 2 networks, and other decentralized systems.
The deal also expands Babylonβs reach across the Ledger ecosystem, including support through the Ledger Wallet app and support for BABY, Babylonβs native token. The tie up may also carry weight because of Ledgerβs market presence, with the company reporting more than 8 million devices sold globally.
The Bigger Vault Trend
This news also fits into a broader shift across digital assets. Vault-based strategies are becoming more popular as users seek ways to earn returns while keeping control of their funds. DeFi protocols like Yearn Finance helped popularize vault models, while newer players such as Telegram, Bitwise, and Morpho have also pushed structured onchain yield strategies into the spotlight.
Babylonβs partnership with Ledger shows that the market is moving toward tools that blend security, programmability, and self-custody rather than asking users to trade one for the other.
CoinLawβs Takeaway
I think this is one of the more practical Bitcoin infrastructure updates in recent months. In my experience, many Bitcoin holders are interested in DeFi, but they do not want to move into wrapped assets or trust a third party with custody. I found Babylonβs vault model more compelling because it tries to keep Bitcoin on Bitcoin while still opening the door to more productive use cases. If this approach gains traction, it could help bring a much larger share of idle BTC into onchain finance.