‘Crypto-powered’ rent rewards arrive in the Triangle. What to know.
AI-generated summary reviewed by our newsroom.
- MegPrime launched nationwide this week, including Triangle markets.
- Renters earn monthly token rewards (2% back, up to $100) and one point per dollar.
- The SEC's non‑action letter says it won't take action on MegPrime's described structure.
MegPrime, a crypto‑based rent‑rewards platform that says it can help renters save for a home, launched nationwide this week, including in the Triangle.
The Dallas startup pitches itself as a way for renters to earn meaningful monthly rewards — and eventually put those rewards toward buying a home — simply by paying rent using digital currency through its app.
Among its claims: If you’re paying $2,000 a month in rent, you can receive up to $100 back — or up to $800 at their “Max Reward” properties. Meanwhile, every dollar you spend on rent earns a point. When you buy a home through MegPrime, those points can become “up to $12,000 in cash back.”
“The model is straightforward,” MegPrime co-founder and CEO Zach Ipour told The N&O in a video call. “Most of the rewards are funded through the pooled marketing budgets of participating parties, such as developers, lenders and brokerages, who are all invested in the same outcome.”
“We didn’t come from Silicon Valley,” he added. “We’re homebuilders and private‑equity people who built this to solve our own buyers’ problems — and realized it could help everyone.”
MegPrime received an SEC non‑action relief letter earlier this year, which the founder described as the key regulatory hurdle.
The letter means the SEC will not treat MegPrime’s crypto‑based rewards as securities. Without that clarity, the company says it couldn’t legally offer rewards redeemable for cash.
But not everyone is sold on MegPrime. In addition to larger questions about the use of cryptocurrency, some of MegPrime’s terms could raise alarms for renters, said Nick MacLeod, executive director of the North Carolina Tenants Union.
And the rewards do little to address the existing power imbalance between tenants and landlords, MacLeod said. There must be a systemic shift to address the housing crisis, and one way to do that is by allowing tenants to collectively negotiate with their landlords to determine, for example, rent increases and services provided, MacLeod said.
“I think that functionally lowering rent and functionally giving people down payment assistance for buying a home, those are good things,” MacLeod said. Questions to keep in mind, though, are whether the program is sustainable and whether there may be unforeseen downsides, MacLeod said.
Below is what the company does, how it works, and what renters should pay attention to before signing on.
How it works
MegPrime is a blockchain‑based payment platform that uses a type of digital record‑keeping system to move money, instead of relying solely on banks or credit‑card networks.
It combines several businesses under one umbrella: a rent‑payment app, a crypto rewards system, an apartment‑locator service, a real‑estate brokerage and a mortgage lender.
The company says the goal is to turn rent — traditionally a “dead cost” — into something that builds savings and eventually helps renters transition into homeownership.
Renters pay rent or mortgages using USDC (a stablecoin) or MegPrime Token (its own volatile cryptocurrency).
Rent is then paid via an automated clearing house to the landlord or mortgage company. MegPrime claims its technology allows same‑day settlement from crypto to a bank account.
“Crypto is just the vehicle. It’s faster, more efficient and borderless,” Ipour said. “We couldn’t build this on traditional banking rails.”
What MegPrime promises renters
MegPrime offers two layers of incentives: monthly rewards and homeownership points.
Any renter can earn 2% back, up to $100 per month.
At “Max Reward” partner properties, including dozens in Raleigh and Durham such as Lexington Farms Apartments and Hudson at Georgia’s Landing, renters can earn $500 to $800 per month (10% to 20% of rent).
Rewards are paid in MegPrime Token but can be instantly converted to cash.
Every dollar a renter pays through MegPrime earns one “homeownership point.” Example: A renter paying $24,000 a year in rent would accumulate 24,000 points.
Those points can later be redeemed for “up to $12,000” toward a home purchase, but only if the renter uses MegPrime’s own real‑estate brokerage and mortgage company to buy the home.
What renters should know
- Rewards are paid in MegPrime’s own crypto token.
Even though renters can convert rewards to cash, the value of the MegPrime Token can fluctuate. Renters who wait to convert may see rewards rise or fall.
If you convert the token to a stable coin, or USDC, right when you receive it, “there’s a small window of volatility where the token price can change, but the risk is minimal,” said Ipour.
- The $12,000 homeownership incentive has strings.
Renters only get the down‑payment credit if they buy a home through MegPrime’s own brokerage, and use MegPrime’s own mortgage company.
It’s not a universal credit — it’s a marketing tool.
- The model depends on commissions and marketing dollars.
The large monthly incentives ($300 to $800) come from commissions MegPrime earns when renters sign leases at partner properties and marketing dollars the company chooses to redirect to renters.
But if landlords are looking for tenants, there’s a straightforward, existing way to attract them: lowering rent, the N.C. Tenants Union’s MacLeod said.
- The platform is very new.
At the time of the interview, fewer than 50 renters were paying rent through the app, though the company claims “10,000 people” are on a waitlist.
Full bill‑pay is just launching. This is early‑stage adoption, not a proven national system.
- The SEC letter is not an endorsement.
The SEC’s non‑action relief means the agency won’t take action based on the specific structure MegPrime described. It does not mean the SEC endorses the product or guarantees future regulatory stability.
- Not all landlords participate.
Renters can pay any landlord via ACH, but the biggest rewards only exist at “Max Reward” properties. Availability varies widely by state and market.
- Rewards can change.
MegPrime can adjust tiers, reduce payouts or change incentives at any time. Rewards are not contractual.
That could pose a problem for renters making decisions about what they can afford, MacLeod said. They may expect to be paying one price, but later learn the terms have changed.
“I think that that stability, consistency feels quite important,” MacLeod said.
NC attorney general weighs in
The North Carolina attorney general’s office had not received any complaints about MegPrime as of May 29.
“In general, we urge consumers to be vigilant about any offer that seems ‘too good to be true’ and to be cautious when it comes to cryptocurrency,” the office said in an email to The N&O. “Scammers often capitalize on cryptocurrency, and it has fewer legal protections.”
The office recommends that residents protect themselves and their cryptocurrency from scams by taking steps including: watching out for impersonators, never authenticating activity using a prompt from an unknown caller and being wary of unsolicited messages asking for payment in cryptocurrency.
This story was originally published June 6, 2026 at 8:26 AM with the headline "‘Crypto-powered’ rent rewards arrive in the Triangle. What to know.."