Bitcoin Depot Collapses Into Bankruptcy as Crypto ATM Crackdown Intensifies
- Bitcoin Depot filed for voluntary Chapter 11 in Texas on May 18 and took its Bitcoin ATM network offline.
- Preliminary Q1 revenue fell US$80.7 million, or 49.2%, as transaction volume dropped under tighter rules and compliance controls.
- BTM shares fell about 73% after the filing, with the company planning an orderly wind-down and asset sale.
Bitcoin Depot filed for voluntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy in Texas on May 18, taking its Bitcoin ATM network offline as tighter state rules, lower transaction limits, litigation and falling revenue made the kiosk business unsustainable.
The company said the case in the US Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Texas is meant to support an orderly wind-down and sale of assets.
Bitcoin Depot operated more than 9,000 kiosk locations globally as of August 2025 and described itself as the largest Bitcoin ATM operator in North America.
Shares reacted immediately. BTM was trading at US$0.7842 (AU$1.09), down about 73% from the prior close.
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Revenue Decline
Bitcoin Depot had warned less than a week earlier that its Q1 report would be late and that management had substantial doubt about its ability to continue as a going concern. The May 12 Form 12b-25 said Q1 revenue fell by US$80.7 million (AU$112.2 million), or 49.2%, from the same period last year.
The filing tied the decline to lower transaction volume caused by regulatory pressure and enhanced compliance controls.
Gross profit fell 85.5% to US$4.5 million (AU$6.3 million) from US$31.2 million (AU$43.4 million), while operating expenses rose US$4.9 million (AU$6.8 million), or 32.3%, mainly because of litigation costs.
Bitcoin Depot reported a preliminary Q1 net loss of US$9.5 million (AU$13.2 million), compared with US$12.2 million (AU$17.0 million) in net income a year earlier. Cash and cash equivalents fell to US$44.0 million (AU$61.2 million) at March 31 from US$65.6 million (AU$91.2 million) at the end of 2025.
Regulation Basically Destroyed Bitcoin Depot
Chief executive Alex Holmes said Bitcoin Depot had strengthened anti-fraud controls through enhanced identity verification, customer warnings and lower transaction limits.
He said state compliance obligations, transaction limits, restrictions or bans, litigation and enforcement actions materially affected the company’s business and financial position.
“Under these circumstances, the Company’s current business model is unsustainable,” Holmes stated.
State and municipal rules now include fee caps, daily transaction limits, mandatory fraud warnings, customer refund rights, kiosk registration requirements, local bans and zoning restrictions across multiple jurisdictions.
Bitcoin Depot said Canadian entities are included in the US court-supervised process and Canadian restructuring proceedings are expected.
Other non-US entities will wind down under local law, leaving the next stage focused on asset sales, creditor recoveries and whether any buyer wants parts of the offline ATM network.
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