TLDR
- Steak ‘n Shake will begin accepting Bitcoin payments nationwide on May 16
- The rollout will make crypto payments available to over 100 million customers
- The company hinted at Bitcoin acceptance in March with social media posts
- This represents a full-scale adoption, unlike many other chains that only implemented limited pilot programs
- Steak ‘n Shake joins a small group of food chains experimenting with cryptocurrency payments
Steak ‘n Shake has announced it will begin accepting Bitcoin as payment at all its locations starting May 16. The American fast food chain made the announcement on May 9 through its social media channels, stating that cryptocurrency payments would be available to more than 100 million customers across the United States.
“The movement is just beginning,” the company posted on X, formerly Twitter, signing off as “Steaktoshi” in a nod to Bitcoin’s pseudonymous creator Satoshi Nakamoto.
Steak n Shake accepting Bitcoin payments at all locations starting May 16, making the cryptocurrency available to our more than 100 million customers. The movement is just beginning….
—Steaktoshi pic.twitter.com/1SGMifDZep
— Steak 'n Shake (@SteaknShake) May 9, 2025
The fast food chain first hinted at this move in March when it posted “Should Steak ‘n Shake accept Bitcoin?” on social media. This post caught the attention of crypto enthusiasts and Bitcoin supporters, including former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, who quickly responded with a “yes.”
Since then, Steak ‘n Shake has been building momentum with Bitcoin-themed marketing campaigns. The company has incorporated crypto imagery in its social media feeds and even posted an image of a Mars-bound cargo ship stamped with the Bitcoin logo, referencing Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s space ambitions.
Joining the Crypto Movement
Steak ‘n Shake’s nationwide rollout marks a rare case of full-scale cryptocurrency adoption in the fast food industry. Most restaurant chains have only implemented limited pilot programs or regional trials when it comes to accepting digital currencies.
The decision places Steak ‘n Shake among a small but growing number of food chains experimenting with crypto payments. Chipotle has been accepting nearly 100 different cryptocurrencies via payment processor Flexa since 2022, including Bitcoin, Ether, and Solana.
The future is bright pic.twitter.com/gXYqtdIUUQ
— Steak 'n Shake (@SteaknShake) April 24, 2025
Subway was one of the earliest adopters, piloting Bitcoin payments as far back as 2013 at select franchises. KFC briefly offered a “Bitcoin Bucket” promotion in Canada in 2018, allowing customers to make purchases with BTC.
Even fast food giant McDonald’s has dipped its toes into crypto waters, accepting Bitcoin in Lugano, Switzerland, as part of a local cryptocurrency initiative. Burger King has also accepted crypto gift cards and direct crypto payments in select countries like Germany, the Netherlands, and Venezuela.
A Real-World Test for Bitcoin
Unlike high-margin retailers, fast food chains operate on thin margins and high volume, making Steak ‘n Shake’s Bitcoin rollout a real-world stress test for the cryptocurrency’s speed, cost, and usability at scale.
Many previous attempts by food chains to implement crypto payments have been discontinued, scaled back, or confined to narrow pilots. Starbucks allowed customers to reload their digital wallets using Bitcoin via the Bakkt app in 2021, but this feature converted BTC into dollars before reaching the retailer.
Similarly, Chipotle’s partnership with digital payments firm Flexa converts cryptocurrencies into fiat at the point of sale. These conversion systems help businesses avoid dealing directly with cryptocurrency volatility.
Outside the United States, several fast food giants have turned to crypto as a hedge against local currency instability. In Venezuela, where inflation has driven interest in dollar alternatives, Burger King briefly partnered with Latin American crypto firm Cryptobuyer in 2020.
In El Salvador, where Bitcoin was made legal tender in 2021, Pizza Hut became one of the first mainstream outlets to accept the cryptocurrency. This parallels the famous first Bitcoin transaction for food, when Laszlo Hanyecz paid 10,000 BTC for two pizzas on May 22, 2010 – an amount worth more than a billion dollars today.
Steak ‘n Shake’s May 16 launch date comes just days before the annual celebration of Bitcoin Pizza Day on May 22, which commemorates that first-ever Bitcoin transaction for food.