Bitcoin savings for families
Open a time-locked vault for your child. Grandparents, aunts, and uncles add gifts along the way — no accounts, no fees on gifts. Then, on a day you choose, you hand it all over in one unforgettable moment.
While you're here — we're weighing round-ups: spare change from everyday purchases, saved as bitcoin for your kids. Would you use it?
Early families get first access when vaults open.
How it works
Tidbit turns saving into a story your whole family writes together — and your child gets to read the ending.
A digital savings bond — time-locked on-chain until the age you choose.
Pick a child, a goal if you like, and how it's held. One choice, two kinds of vault — try both above, and spin the dial while you're at it.
Share one polished gift link. Grandma doesn't need an account, an app, or a lecture on bitcoin — she just gives, and gets a thank-you back from the family.
On the day you chose, the vault opens: every gift, every note, every sealed letter from the people who loved them along the way — handed over at once.
Real screens
These are real screens from the working app — the home you'll wake up to, the plans that run themselves, and the letters waiting for unlock day.
Family balance
$3,060.00
₿ 0.0306 · 3 vaults
Home — the whole family, one glance
Active plans
Coming up
Plans — set the rhythm once
Blakely's College Fund
The story — letters & keepsakes
Vaults
Every vault is your call: protected behind a real on-chain time-lock, or flexible for withdrawals when life happens. Flexible can become protected any time — a one-way door; once locked, not even Tidbit can open it early. And vaults can begin before a birthday even exists: an “expecting” vault starts stacking the moment you know they're coming.
The gifting loop
This is everything Grandma sees: your child's name, a note, and a give button. No account, no app to install, no bitcoin homework — and when she gives $50, the vault receives every cent of it in bitcoin. That's not a promotion; it's a founding rule of the product.
Every cent becomes bitcoin.
Go on — send one below. This one's just pretend.
You've been invited to give
A gift for Blakely
Blakely's College Fund
Protected · Unlocks at 18
$1,850.00
₿ 0.0185
Pricing
You'll see the exact fee on the review screen every single time — before you confirm, never after.
“Tidbit makes money from small, visible fees when you contribute — never from quietly taking more of your child's bitcoin, and never from a monthly bill.”
Planned pricing — final rates confirmed at launch.
Protection
Family savings should be boring in the best possible way.
Protected vaults use Bitcoin's own time-lock — the rules live on the chain, not in a promise.
Balances are held with qualified institutional custody, never on a phone that can be lost or a key that can be forgotten.
Taking money out of a protected vault passes a parent review window — no single tap can undo years of saving.
The unlock ceremony
The unlock ceremony walks your family through it together: every gift replayed, every sealed letter finally opened, and a head start passed from the people who love them — in one unforgettable moment.
Sealed until unlock day — but this one's a demo. Break the seal.
A note from the founder
The idea finally clicked this past year, when my niece was born. I wanted to buy her bitcoin, hold it in cold storage, and hand her the keys on her eighteenth birthday — and I realized how hard that simple wish is for a normal family to actually pull off. I believe bitcoin is the best savings technology the world has ever had, and I can't think of a better use for it than our children. Too many kids cross into adulthood with nothing to show for eighteen years of birthdays, holidays, and people who loved them. Tidbit exists to make what I wanted for my niece easier than it's ever been — for any parent, any family, and a Bitcoin network left better than we found it. Bit by bit.
— Bray, founder & uncle
FAQ
No spam — one email when vaults open.
While you're here — we're weighing round-ups: spare change from everyday purchases, saved as bitcoin for your kids. Would you use it?