Bitcoin ATMs were (and still are) the most tangible and literal implementation of crypto.
They turned the process of buying and selling crypto from an abstract act done on a screen and moved it into the real world, enabling people to buy Bitcoin without verification, a bank account, or any real understanding of how custody works.
Scan a QR code, insert a few bills, and all of the BTC you can afford lands in a crypto wallet in a few minutes.
For a while, that physical aspect of buying a virtual currency with cash gave Bitcoin something exchanges couldn’t: the feeling that it was part of everyday life.
Bitcoin Depot, once North America’s largest Bitcoin ATM operator, filed for Chapter 11 in the US Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Texas on May 18 and took its entire network of roughly 9,700 machines offline.
Revenue had already fallen 49.2% year-over-year in Q1 2026, a drop of $80.7 million, while gross profit collapsed 85.5%, falling from $31.2 million to just $4.5 million.
A $12.2 million profit from the prior-year period had swung to a $9.5 million net loss, a deterioration that CEO Alex Holmes attributed to a business model he described as “unsustainable.” The filing swept in the company’s Canadian entities under court supervision, with other international operations directed to wind down under local law.
As CryptoSlate reported earlier this month, Canadian authorities had already proposed a complete ban on crypto ATMs, with officials saying they were a primary channel for fraud and money laundering. The decision represents a pretty sharp political turn toward treating access to Bitcoin as a liability. Bitcoin Depot’s collapse shows what happens to the business model while regulators are still building their case.
How Bitcoin ATMs made crypto physical
Bitcoin ATMs spread by solving a concrete problem. Until just a few years ago, crypto exchanges were much slower and clunkier than they are today. Getting money onto a US exchange required waiting periods that felt unreasonably long for an asset built around a 10-minute block time.
A machine in a corner store or in a gas station bypassed all of the friction from the verification and the waiting, reducing the entire process to a simple cash transaction anyone could complete.
You could go as far as to say that it was convenience, not BTC, that was the main product of these ATMs. People were willing to pay for that convenience in the form of often outrageous fees ranging from 10% to 30% per transaction, a premium that essentially no financial service could have sustained, but the ATMs managed through sheer immediacy.
But irreversibility was the main structural vulnerability of that model. When a bank customer gets defrauded, a fraud desk can dispute the charge and recover the funds. When a Bitcoin ATM sends funds to a wallet controlled by a scammer, the transaction settles on the blockchain and stays there forever, with no authority capable of reversing it.
Phone-based social engineering campaigns that coached elderly victims through ATM transactions became a documented pattern across multiple states, and the scale of those losses is what ultimately gave regulators both the evidence and the political cover to act.
The FBI logged 13,460 crypto kiosk fraud complaints in 2025 alone, representing $389 million in reported losses, a 58% jump from the prior year. Adults aged 60 and older accounted for roughly $257.5 million of that figure, concentrating the harm in a demographic with enough electoral power to make a crackdown politically durable.
The access to crypto also shifted in ways that steadily eroded the convenience of ATMs. By 2025, spot Bitcoin ETFs were a standard part of standard brokerage accounts, fintech apps had simplified crypto onboarding considerably, and stablecoin rails had expanded the ways people could hold digital assets without navigating price volatility.
The ATM’s fee premium was harder to justify against alternatives that had gotten cheaper and more accessible, and the users who remained most reliant on cash kiosks were the ones most exposed to scams.
Compliance became the death of ATM profitability
California was the first to move against Bitcoin ATMs. The Digital Financial Assets Law capped daily transactions at $1,000 and limited fees to the greater of $5 or 15% of the transaction value, with mandatory written disclosures required before any transaction could proceed.
A California court upheld the daily cap in 2024, and the fee and disclosure rules took effect in 2025. For operators whose model rested on cash conversions with high fees and at a high volume, it compressed revenue per user while driving up compliance overhead simultaneously, attacking margin from both directions at once.
The regulatory pressure on Bitcoin ATMs then quickly extended beyond fee caps. Indiana adopted a total ban in March 2026, at a point when nearly 900 ATMs were operating in the state, with Tennessee’s ban set to take effect July 1, 2026, and Minnesota approving its own prohibition as well.
The American Bankers Association counted 20 states with new laws restricting crypto ATM activity as of April, with proposed legislation pending in many others.
The enforcement actions running alongside those legislative moves were equally damaging. Iowa’s attorney general sued Bitcoin Depot and CoinFlip in February 2025, alleging the two companies had cost state residents more than $20 million, with a state fact sheet reporting that 98.16% of money Iowans sent through Bitcoin Depot was tied to scam transactions.
Massachusetts filed its own lawsuit against Bitcoin Depot in February 2026, with the attorney general’s office saying data showed more than half of the company’s revenue from Bitcoin ATMs in the state was scam-related. Maine reached a $1.9 million settlement to compensate residents who’d lost money through Bitcoin Depot kiosks between 2022 and 2025.
Connecticut temporarily suspended the company’s money-transmission license in March 2026, citing overcharges, refund failures, and a public safety standard serious enough to justify emergency action.
By the time it filed for Chapter 11, the company had accrued over $20 million in legal judgments in Q4 2025 alone, and an April cyberattack had taken another $3.7 million out of its crypto wallets.
This accumulation of pressure is the sad paradox of Bitcoin ATMs. Every protection layered onto a transaction makes it less likely to harm a user and more expensive to run the machine.
Mandatory ID checks, blockchain analytics requirements, transaction holds, written warnings, refund rights, fee caps, daily limits, state licensing renewals, and litigation reserves all pile up against a product that was profitable only because it was fast, loose, and cash-first.
Add enough of those requirements, and you turn a convenience premium into a compliance trap with no exit. Access to Bitcoin has now migrated into infrastructure built with regulation at its center. ETFs, custodians, licensed exchanges, and payment apps have absorbed the retail adoption function that Bitcoin ATMs once served.
The ATM was the first real door to crypto, but it worked only when doors were rare and hard to find. In 2026, when the average American can get their hands on Bitcoin through a regular brokerage account in a couple of minutes, Bitcoin ATMs have run out of things only they can do.





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