Shares of crypto ATM operator Bitcoin Depot (BTM) crashed more than 70% after the company officially filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, triggering a massive investor sell-off and effectively ending operations for one of the largest Bitcoin ATM networks in North America. The stock plunged from above $2 to roughly $0.77 in a single trading session as traders rushed to exit positions following news that the company would wind down operations and sell off assets.
As part of the bankruptcy process, Bitcoin Depot confirmed it has taken its entire Bitcoin ATM network offline. The company previously operated more than:
The company filed for Chapter 11 protection in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Texas and said the process will focus on:
The filing also warned shareholders that existing equity could potentially face a “significant or complete loss” depending on how the restructuring process unfolds.
CEO Alex Holmes blamed increasingly aggressive regulation around crypto ATMs as one of the main reasons the company collapsed. Over the past year, several U.S. states introduced:
According to Holmes: “The company’s current business model is unsustainable.” The pressure intensified as regulators and law enforcement agencies increased scrutiny over scams tied to Bitcoin ATMs. The FBI reportedly logged more than 13,000 crypto ATM fraud complaints in 2025, with losses approaching $389 million.
The bankruptcy filing did not come completely out of nowhere. Bitcoin Depot had already reported:
Earlier this year, the company also suffered a cyberattack in which approximately:
was reportedly stolen from company wallets. Combined with mounting legal and compliance costs, the company’s financial condition deteriorated rapidly.
Bitcoin Depot’s collapse is one of the clearest signs yet that the Bitcoin ATM industry is entering a major consolidation phase. For years, crypto ATM operators expanded aggressively by offering simple cash-to-Bitcoin access through machines located in:
But regulators increasingly viewed the machines as vulnerable to:
As compliance costs increased and transaction limits tightened, many operators struggled to maintain profitability.
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