HomeCoinsLitecoinIs It All Over For Bitcoin ATMs? Bitcoin ATM Empire Hits Bankruptcy

Is It All Over For Bitcoin ATMs? Bitcoin ATM Empire Hits Bankruptcy

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Ahmed Barakat

Author

Ahmed Barakat

Part of the Team Since

Aug 2025

About Author

Ahmed Balaha is a journalist and copywriter based in Georgia with a growing focus on blockchain technology, DeFi, AI, privacy, digital assets, and fintech innovation.

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Bitcoin Depot, once the largest Bitcoin ATM operator in North America with 9,276 kiosks across the U.S., Canada, and Australia, has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection and news says its shutting down entirely.

The Atlanta-based company, which trades on Nasdaq under the ticker BTCD, filed voluntarily in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Texas on Monday and has already taken its entire ATM network offline.

Q1 results told the terminal story: revenue collapsed 49% year-over-year, gross profit fell 85% to $4.5 million, and the company swung from a $12.2 million profit to a $9.5 million loss in a single quarter.

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Bearish signal for the physical crypto infrastructure sector.

The bankruptcy raises a direct question for the broader retail on-ramp market: as Bitcoin trades near $76,860, who absorbs the cash-to-crypto demand that Bitcoin Depot’s 9,276 kiosks once served, and at what fee structure?

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The mechanism here is worth understanding precisely. Bitcoin Depot’s business model charged retail users fees ranging from 8% to 20% per transaction, a premium justified by the convenience of cash-to-crypto conversion at grocery stores, gas stations, and pharmacies.

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That premium was defensible in 2020 and 2021, when mobile exchange alternatives were intimidating to mainstream users and Bitcoin ATMs represented genuine access infrastructure for the underbanked.

By 2024, that logic had inverted. Coinbase, Cash App, and regulated exchange apps had made sub-1% fee on-ramps frictionless on any smartphone.

The ‘convenience’ of a Bitcoin ATM kiosk became a fee trap rather than a feature, and retail volume dried up accordingly.

Maintaining 9,276 physical machines, with logistics, security, cash handling, and software overhead, against collapsing transaction volume produced a fixed-cost structure that crushed margins even before regulators arrived.

Source: Coinatmradar

Then the regulatory pressure hit simultaneously from multiple directions. CEO Alex Holmes stated in the bankruptcy filing that “states have imposed increasingly stringent compliance obligations, including new transaction limits, and in some jurisdictions, outright restrictions or bans on BTM operations.”

Holmes added directly: “These developments have materially affected Bitcoin Depot’s business and financial position. Under these circumstances, the Company’s current business model is unsustainable.”

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The legal exposure compounded the operational collapse. Bitcoin Depot faces a high-profile lawsuit from attorneys general in Massachusetts and Iowa over alleged facilitation of crypto scams.

Connecticut’s Department of Banking issued a temporary cease-and-desist in April 2026, moving to revoke the company’s money transmission license.

The company’s Canadian subsidiary BitAccess also faced an $18.47 million arbitration award tied to an agreement with bankrupt U.S. kiosk operator Cash Cloud, a liability disclosed via SEC Form 8-K in November 2025.

Crypto ATM fraud reached a record $389 million in reported losses last year, a 58% increase from 2024, which drew exactly the regulatory attention Bitcoin Depot could not survive.

Physical Bitcoin ATM infrastructure and digital exchange infrastructure are not the same thing. Bitcoin Depot bet on the former at scale, using a SPAC merger with GSR II Meteora Acquisition Corp to go public on Nasdaq in 2023, near the top of the market’s appetite for crypto infrastructure narratives.

The market was already shifting beneath the thesis before the ink dried.


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