In a move that signals how far Bitcoin has crept into mainstream American business, Steak ’n Shake, the 91-year-old fast-food chain famous for its steakburgers and milkshakes, has announced the creation of a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve (SBR) — a corporate treasury that will hold all Bitcoin received from restaurant sales.
The company’s announcement, made on X on October 31, marks one of the first times a major U.S. restaurant chain has formally committed to building a Bitcoin reserve directly from customer transactions rather than through investment purchases.
What the Company Announced
“All payments received in Bitcoin will be placed in our Strategic Bitcoin Reserve,” Steak ’n Shake stated in its official post. The company also revealed that it will donate 210 satoshis (sats), roughly $0.23, from every Bitcoin-themed meal sold over the next 12 months to the OpenSats Initiative, a nonprofit that supports developers maintaining open-source Bitcoin infrastructure.
Steak n Shake is announcing the creation of a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve. All payments received in Bitcoin will be placed in our SBR. 🚀
— Steak 'n Shake (@SteaknShake) October 31, 2025
We are donating 210 sats from every Bitcoin meal we sell to Open Sats Initiative, Inc. over the next 12 months. 🧡
Make your Bitcoin…
The move accompanies a new marketing partnership with Fold, a Bitcoin financial services firm. Under this partnership, customers who purchase a “Bitcoin Meal” or “Bitcoin Steakburger” can claim $5 worth of Bitcoin through the Fold app after uploading their receipt to a dedicated website, bitcoinmealdeal.com.
How the Bitcoin Strategy Evolved
This announcement caps nearly six months of growing Bitcoin integration at Steak ’n Shake. The company first began accepting Bitcoin payments globally via the Lightning Network — a faster and cheaper Bitcoin payment protocol — in May 2025.
The decision drew public support from Jack Dorsey, co-founder of Twitter and CEO of Block, Inc., who shared photos of himself buying fries at the restaurant with Bitcoin. The company’s leadership said the shift has already had a tangible business impact.
Speaking at the Bitcoin 2025 conference in Las Vegas in May, Steak ’n Shake executive Dan Edwards said the brand had cut its payment processing costs by about 50% as more customers opted to pay with Bitcoin instead of credit cards. Credit card networks typically charge between 2–3% per transaction, while Bitcoin’s Lightning Network can process payments for a fraction of that cost.
A Crypto-Friendly Approach That’s Paying Off
According to the company’s latest earnings report, Steak ’n Shake’s same-store sales rose 15% in the most recent quarter, outpacing all major fast-food competitors. While it hasn’t disclosed how much of its revenue comes specifically from Bitcoin payments, the company has credited the crypto community for boosting brand engagement and driving customer growth.
“Thank you, Bitcoiners, for helping change the trajectory of Steak ’n Shake,” the company said in its statement.
In the second quarter of 2025, Steak ’n Shake reported $69.3 million in revenue, up 12% year over year. Executives noted that a “Bitcoin effect” — the enthusiasm from crypto-friendly customers, played a role in that momentum.
Why the Bitcoin Reserve Matters
The concept of a “Strategic Bitcoin Reserve” mirrors a growing corporate trend where companies hold part of their treasury in Bitcoin as a hedge against inflation or as a long-term store of value.
While firms like MicroStrategy, Tesla, and Marathon Digital hold Bitcoin as investment assets, Steak ’n Shake’s approach differs: it’s accumulating Bitcoin organically from customer payments rather than converting cash into crypto.
That distinction could prove meaningful. By holding earned Bitcoin rather than purchased Bitcoin, Steak ’n Shake effectively builds a self-sustaining digital reserve that scales with adoption, without exposing itself to large upfront market risk.
However, analysts also note that such a reserve will likely grow slowly. Fast food margins are thin, and Bitcoin payments still represent a small fraction of total sales. But as more customers pay with BTC, the reserve could become a symbolic asset for the company’s forward-facing brand identity.
The Fold Partnership and How It Works
The new Fold partnership brings another layer to the initiative. Under the deal, customers who buy a Bitcoin-branded meal receive a code on their receipt that can be redeemed for $5 in Bitcoin through the Fold app.
🚨 BREAKING 🚨
— FOLD BITCOIN (@fold_app) October 31, 2025
We've partnered with @SteaknShake to make the Bitcoin Steakburger even more rewarding.
Grab yours and get $5 in bitcoin from us
More details 👇 pic.twitter.com/MJoNE69JD1
Fold, founded by Will Reeves, offers a Visa-powered debit card that lets users earn Bitcoin “cashback” on everyday purchases. Reeves said in a statement that this collaboration is a step toward normalizing Bitcoin in everyday consumer life:
“Bitcoin goes mainstream when it starts showing up in everyday life,” Reeves said. “For many people, this will be the first time they ever own Bitcoin, and it will come from something as ordinary as grabbing a burger. That’s what real adoption looks like.”
The $5 promotion is a limited-time offer, as mentioned by them, and available at approximately 400 Steak ’n Shake locations across the United States, running while supplies last.
Why This Move Could Influence Others
The announcement comes amid a broader trend of U.S. businesses experimenting with Bitcoin as both a payment method and a brand differentiator. For restaurants, the appeal lies in lower transaction fees, faster settlement times, and tapping into the loyalty of Bitcoin enthusiasts, a community known for supporting companies that adopt the cryptocurrency.
If Steak ’n Shake’s experiment continues to show tangible business results, it could push other mid-tier restaurant chains or franchises to reconsider Bitcoin acceptance — particularly as Lightning Network adoption expands and payment apps make crypto use as simple as scanning a QR code.
That said, the company’s Bitcoin-only stance hasn’t been without controversy. Earlier this year, Steak ’n Shake briefly considered accepting Ethereum (ETH) payments but faced backlash from Bitcoin maximalists, advocates who believe only Bitcoin represents true decentralized money. The company eventually reversed its decision, aligning entirely with the Bitcoin community.
A Cautious Step Toward Mainstream Crypto Adoption
While Steak ’n Shake’s Bitcoin reserve is unlikely to rival corporate holdings from major financial players, its significance lies elsewhere, in visibility. A legacy American restaurant integrating Bitcoin into its payments, marketing, philanthropy, and treasury management presents a real-world example of crypto integration beyond the tech world.
For customers, the promotion offers a low-barrier introduction to Bitcoin ownership; for the company, it’s a modern branding and cost-saving experiment; and for the industry, it’s a potential test case for whether Bitcoin can truly thrive in day-to-day commerce rather than just as a speculative asset.
Whether it becomes a “happy meal for hodlers” or a short-lived novelty remains to be seen, but Steak ’n Shake’s latest initiative is another marker of Bitcoin’s quiet march from digital fringe to the fast-food counter.

