SpaceX · Japan · Elon Musk · Bitcoin Depot · Bitcoin · SEC · CryptoSlate
The US Bitcoin ATM industry is breaking under fraud, bans, and fees
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◎ Multiple-sources
Bitcoin Depot’s collapse shows how fraud losses, state bans, KYC rules, and high fees are forcing a reassessment of the US Bitcoin ATM model.
Key facts
- FTC data showed that reported Bitcoin ATM fraud totaled more than $65 million in the first half of 2024, with a median reported loss of $10,000
- Options positioning shows traders hedging $75,000 and $60,000 downside while keeping $80,000 and $90,000 rebound calls alive
- Bitcoin adoption has moved well beyond kiosks, with Chainalysis estimating over $1.2 trillion in Bitcoin-to-fiat inflows to centralized exchanges from July 2024 to June 2025
- MSTR has risen about 6.8% while Bitcoin is down about 12.5%, but STRC’s near-par trading may matter more for whether Strategy can keep financing BTC purchases through 2026
Summary
Bitcoin ATM company, Bitcoin Depot, filed for Chapter 11 protection on May 18 in the Southern District of Texas, announcing it would wind down operations and sell assets, and that its kiosk network, with over 9,000 locations globally as of August 2025, would go offline the same day. A May 12 SEC disclosure showed that first-quarter revenue fell 49.2% year over year, gross profit collapsed by 85.5%, and management flagged “substantial doubt” about the company's ability to continue as a going concern. Bitcoin Depot tied the deterioration to state and municipal restrictions, lower transaction limits, enhanced identity verification requirements, litigation, and more than $20 million in accrued legal judgments. That accounting turns the bankruptcy into a regulated business, explaining how compliance requirements dismantled its economics.