Steak and Shake saves about 50% on payment processing fees by accepting Bitcoin and projects $6 million in annual savings if its entire credit card customer base made the switch.
This figure, confirmed again in a June 2026 company statement, makes the 90-year-old hamburger chain one of the most concrete arguments in the argument that Bitcoin’s value as a payment network is more immediately useful to most companies than its value as a portfolio asset.
This bullish institutional adoption news has fallen as Bitcoin USD trades at $62,400, up +0.5% in the last 24 hours, with a daily trading volume of $24.1 billion.
STEAK ‘N SHAKE COO SAYS: "BITCOIN IS FASTER THAN CREDIT CARDS. WE SAVE 50% ON PROCESSING FEES."
"WE SEE A POINT OF GROWTH AFTER ACCEPTING BITCOIN" pic.twitter.com/6ajkDeBZNC
– Vivek Sen (@Vivek4real_) June 23, 2026
Steak and Shake: the cost calculation that makes it work
Traditional card payments, Visa, Mastercard and their processing partners, add interchange fees, network assessments and processor margins to each transaction, typically between 2.5% and 3.5% per sale.
Bitcoin payment processing fees on the Lightning Network average around 0.022%, according to analyzes cited at the Bitcoin 2026 conference earlier this year.
This discrepancy explains why a 50% reduction in processing costs is not a marketing claim; It’s arithmetic. Dan Edwards, Steak ‘n Shake’s chief operating officer, said at the Bitcoin 2025 conference in May 2025 that “when customers choose to pay with bitcoin rather than a credit card, we save approximately 50% on our processing fees.”
CEO Michael Boes refined this figure at the Bitcoin 2026 conference. He said: “If every credit card user used Bitcoin, we would save around $6 million per year, which is huge for our bottom line. »
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Scale, cash flow and the closed-loop model
Steak ‘n Shake launched Bitcoin payments over the Lightning Network on May 16, 2025, at approximately 393 locations in the United States, making it one of the largest contiguous physical Lightning deployments in the U.S. restaurant industry.
On launch day alone, the chain reportedly accounted for 1 in 500 Bitcoin transactions worldwide – a figure used by executives to argue that consumer demand for spending BTC exists when the user experience is right.
Unlike previous cryptocurrency experiments at chain restaurants like Subway or Burger King, which routed payments through third-party processors and instantly converted them to dollars, Steak and Shake keeps the Bitcoin it receives.
The company holds a strategic Bitcoin reserve of 168.6 BTC, valued at approximately $15 million in early 2026, built from customer payments and direct treasury purchases, including an initial allocation of $10 million in May 2025.
The chain also pays hourly workers a Bitcoin bonus of $0.21 per hour, funded by this reserve and launched on March 1, 2026, with a two-year vesting period.
Same-store sales grew 11% in the second quarter of 2025 and 15% in the third quarter of 2025, with 18% growth forecast for 2026, according to company data cited by CryptoRank. The payments program, treasury and employee incentives are designed as one integrated system and not as a pilot system.
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Why this is a different argument than the ETF story
BREAK:
BLACKROCK JUST STARTED DUMPING BITCOIN BEFORE THE US MARKET OPENS
THEY SELL MILLIONS OF $BTC AND $ETH EVERY FEW MINUTES
THIS IS EXTREMELY BAD FOR THE MARKETS… pic.twitter.com/t9k1ZglU6a
– ᴛʀᴀᴄᴇʀ (@DeFiTracer) June 24, 2026
In 2026, the institutional narrative for Bitcoin is primarily focused on products such as the BlackRock Bitcoin ETF (IBIT), which provides exposure to BTC prices without direct ownership, thereby influencing capital allocation.
However, the Steak ‘n Shake model highlights Bitcoin’s usefulness differently. Customers paying with Bitcoin at Steak ‘n Shake benefit from immediate savings on fees at the point of transaction, with Lightning Network fees being negligible.
Despite this, consumer friction persists as spending Bitcoin in the United States triggers a taxable event because the IRS classifies BTC as property, complicating common use and preventing broader adoption among retail customers.
Analysts are closely watching whether other major chains will adopt similar Bitcoin payment models or whether card networks will adjust fees for high-volume restaurants, as these developments signal competitive pressure from Lightning Network payments.
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The article How Steak and Shake Bitcoin Payments Could Save $6 Million a Year in Fees appeared first on 99Bitcoins.



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