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Bitcoin Depot’s 9,000 kiosk locations are going offline due to bankruptcy filing.
The company’s business model is being wound down amid tightening regulatory crackdown.
Stringent compliance obligations and transaction limits led to unsustainable operations.

Bitcoin Depot, the largest Bitcoin ATM operator in North America with over 9,000 kiosk locations across 48 U.S. states, Canada, Australia, and Hong Kong, has filed for voluntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy—taking its entire network offline and marking the most significant corporate casualty of the tightening regulatory crackdown on crypto ATM operators.

The filing, made on May 18 in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Texas, is structured not as a restructuring but as an orderly wind-down and asset sale. Bitcoin Depot is not attempting to emerge from bankruptcy as an operating company. It is shutting down.

“The regulatory environment for BTM operators has shifted significantly: states have imposed increasingly stringent compliance obligations, including new transaction limits, and in some jurisdictions, outright restrictions or bans on BTM operations,” CEO Alex Holmes said in a statement. “These developments have materially affected Bitcoin Depot’s business and financial position. Under these circumstances, the Company’s current business model is unsustainable.”

The Death of a Model: Regulation Caught Up

Bitcoin Depot was founded in 2016 with the mission of connecting cash-preferred users to Bitcoin through a network of physical kiosks deployed in convenience stores, gas stations, pharmacies, and malls. At its peak, the company operated the largest BTM network in North America and went public on Nasdaq via a SPAC merger in 2023 under the ticker BTM.

The business model was simple: charge high transaction fees (typically 15–25% above spot price) for the convenience of converting cash to Bitcoin without a bank account. That convenience attracted both unbanked and underbanked users — and, increasingly, the attention of regulators and law enforcement concerned about fraud, money laundering, and scam facilitation.

The regulatory walls closed in throughout 2025 and 2026. States imposed transaction limits — some as low as $500 per day. Several jurisdictions enacted outright restrictions or bans on BTM operations. The FBI and FTC issued repeated warnings about Bitcoin ATM scams, particularly “pig butchering” and tech support fraud schemes where victims are directed to deposit cash at BTMs. The company’s own filings acknowledged that fraud mitigation measures were directly responsible for an expected 30–40% decline in core business revenue for 2026.

Six Months of Cascading Crises

The Chapter 11 filing caps a turbulent six months that saw Bitcoin Depot cycle through multiple existential challenges.

In January 2026, the company acquired Instant Coin Bank, a regional BTM operator in Texas and Oklahoma, in what appeared to be a continued expansion push. In February, Bitcoin Depot became the first major operator to implement mandatory per-transaction ID verification across its U.S. kiosk network — a significant compliance upgrade that also introduced friction that reduced transaction volumes. BTM stock dropped 6.77% on the announcement.

In March, the company disclosed that 50.903 Bitcoin—worth approximately $3.665 million—had been stolen from company-controlled wallets in a cyber incident. The same month, Bitcoin Depot acquired Kutt, a peer-to-peer social betting platform, signaling a diversification strategy away from its core BTM business. BTM stock briefly rose 9.57% on the Kutt announcement before resuming its decline.

Also in March, CEO Scott Buchanan departed and was replaced by Alex Holmes — the executive who is now overseeing the bankruptcy filing. Holmes, who previously served as CEO of MoneyGram International, had been brought in to navigate what the company’s filings described as an increasingly hostile regulatory environment.

By April, Bitcoin Depot’s amended S-1 filing warned investors explicitly that 2026 core revenue was expected to fall 30–40% versus prior years due to fraud mitigation and regulatory compliance costs. The stock had fallen from approximately $1.29 at the start of 2026 to pennies by the time of the Chapter 11 filing.

What Happens to the ATMs

The company’s entire BTM network has been taken offline. The filing covers all U.S. operations, with Canadian entities included in the U.S. court-supervised process. Bitcoin Depot expects to commence restructuring proceedings in Canada separately. Non-U.S. entities in Australia, Hong Kong, and other jurisdictions will wind down under applicable local law.

Court filings and claims information are available through Kroll, the company’s claims agent. Vinson & Elkins LLP is serving as legal advisor, Portage Point Partners as restructuring advisor, and Joele Frank as communications advisor.

The asset sale process will determine whether any buyer acquires the BTM network as a going concern or whether the kiosks, software, retail location contracts, and other assets are sold piecemeal. Given that the filing explicitly describes the business model as “unsustainable,” a full operational revival appears unlikely without fundamental changes to the regulatory landscape.

A Warning for the BTM Industry

Bitcoin Depot’s collapse sends a clear signal to the broader Bitcoin ATM industry, which Coin ATM Radar estimates includes approximately 36,000 machines in the United States alone. The company was not a marginal operator — it was the market leader with the largest network, the most retail partnerships, and a public listing on Nasdaq.

If the largest and most well-resourced operator cannot sustain operations under the current regulatory framework, smaller operators face an even steeper challenge. The combination of state-level transaction limits, mandatory ID verification, increasing litigation from fraud victims, and the reputational damage from association with scam facilitation has created an environment where high-fee, cash-to-crypto conversion is becoming economically unviable as a standalone business.

The irony is that Bitcoin Depot had been among the most proactive operators on compliance. The company implemented enhanced identity verification, customer fraud warnings, lower transaction limits, and per-transaction ID collection — measures Holmes himself cited in the bankruptcy announcement. But the regulatory tightening outpaced the company’s ability to adapt while maintaining profitability.

Also Read: The 2026 Pig Butchering Reckoning: Inside the Year’s Biggest Crypto Scam Crackdowns

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