Bitcoin Depot, the Nasdaq-listed Bitcoin ATM operator, has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Texas as it moves to wind down operations and sell assets through a court-supervised process.
The Atlanta-based company said its Bitcoin ATM network has been taken offline. At one point, Bitcoin Depot operated more than 9,000 kiosks across the United States, Canada, and Australia, allowing customers to convert cash into Bitcoin at retail locations.

The company went public on Nasdaq in 2023 and was once considered one of the largest Bitcoin ATM operators in North America. Its bankruptcy filing marks a sharp reversal for a business that expanded during a period of wider retail interest in crypto access points.
Bitcoin Depot said its Canadian entities are included in the U.S. court-supervised process. The company expects to begin restructuring proceedings in Canada, while other non-U.S. entities will wind down under applicable local laws.
Bitcoin Depot CEO Alex Holmes said the regulatory environment for Bitcoin ATM operators had changed sharply. He said states have imposed tighter compliance rules, including lower transaction limits, and some jurisdictions have restricted or banned Bitcoin ATM operations.
Holmes said the company had strengthened its fraud prevention systems over time. These measures included enhanced identity verification, customer fraud warnings, and lower transaction limits.
Even with those changes, the company said rising legal, compliance, and enforcement costs had weakened its financial position. Holmes said the current business model was no longer sustainable under these conditions.
The company has filed customary first-day motions with the bankruptcy court. These motions are typically used to manage operations, legal obligations, and asset-sale planning during the early stage of Chapter 11 proceedings.
Bitcoin Depot’s financial position worsened before the bankruptcy filing. Preliminary first-quarter results showed revenue fell 49.2% from a year earlier.
The company also swung from a $12.2 million profit to a $9.5 million net loss during the same period. Gross profit dropped 85% to $4.5 million.
The company also reported a $3.7 million loss tied to an April cyberattack. In addition, it had more than $20 million in legal judgments and ongoing litigation matters across several U.S. states, according to the details provided.
These financial pressures arrived as regulators and prosecutors increased scrutiny of crypto ATM operators. Bitcoin ATMs have faced rising criticism because scammers often instruct fraud victims to deposit cash into kiosks and send Bitcoin to criminal-controlled wallets.
Reported crypto ATM fraud losses reached $389 million last year, up 58% from 2024. That increase has drawn more attention from state officials, consumer protection agencies, and law enforcement.
Bitcoin Depot is facing a lawsuit from the attorneys general of Massachusetts and Iowa over claims that its kiosks facilitated crypto scams. The company has said it has adopted additional controls to warn customers and reduce misuse.
The legal actions are part of a wider review of Bitcoin ATM operations across the United States. Some states have moved to impose lower daily limits, licensing requirements, and stricter consumer protection rules.
Supporters of Bitcoin ATMs have argued that the machines provide simple access to digital assets for users who prefer cash or do not use traditional crypto exchanges. Critics say the same accessibility can expose older users and fraud victims to fast, irreversible transactions.
Bitcoin Depot’s shutdown comes as other parts of the crypto industry expand through institutional products such as spot exchange-traded funds and proposals for regulated market structures. The company will now proceed with an orderly wind-down and asset sale under court supervision. Its Bitcoin ATM network remains offline as the bankruptcy case begins.
The post Bitcoin Depot Files for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy, Takes 9,000 Bitcoin ATMs Offline appeared first on CoinCentral.

