Steak ’n Shake, the 91-year-old American burger chain, has officially stepped into Bitcoin—putting $10 million of the cryptocurrency into its treasury and becoming one of the latest consumer brands to test crypto in the real world.
The move follows the company’s decision earlier this year to accept Bitcoin payments, and it’s less about financial engineering than it is about customer behavior. Rather than converting Bitcoin sales into cash, Steak ’n Shake is now keeping every sat it earns.
A Bitcoin Reserve Built by Customers
The company has branded the approach a “Strategic Bitcoin Reserve,” a system that funnels all customer-paid Bitcoin directly into its treasury. As more customers pay in Bitcoin and sales grow, so does the reserve.
In a post on X, Steak ’n Shake described the model as self-sustaining—linking same-store sales growth directly to long-term Bitcoin holdings instead of one-off balance-sheet buys.
That strategy took shape after Steak ’n Shake rolled out Lightning Network payments across all U.S. locations in mid-May, a launch publicly supported by Jack Dorsey. According to the company, the switch cut transaction fees by nearly 50% compared with credit cards and helped drive a roughly 15% increase in same-store sales in the months that followed.
From Burgers to Bitcoin
The treasury strategy was formalized on October 31 through a partnership with Fold Holdings. As part of the promotion, customers received $5 in Bitcoin when ordering branded menu items like the “Bitcoin Burger.”
Steak ’n Shake also pledged to donate 210 satoshis for every “Bitcoin Meal” sold, directing the funds to OpenSats to support Bitcoin Core and open-source development. The idea was to tie Bitcoin adoption to everyday purchases—not speculation.
At current market prices, the $10 million allocation equals roughly 105 BTC, marking the company’s first publicly disclosed Bitcoin treasury position since it began accepting crypto payments in May 2025.
A Different Kind of Corporate Bitcoin Play
Unlike firms such as Strategy that raise capital specifically to buy Bitcoin, Steak ’n Shake’s approach is driven by customers, not capital markets. While more than 200 companies now hold Bitcoin, the burger chain’s position is relatively small—signaling a cautious but deliberate entry rather than an all-in bet.
Steak ’n Shake is owned by Biglari Holdings, led by Sardar Biglari. The parent company has not indicated whether Bitcoin will play a larger role in its broader balance-sheet strategy.
Looking South to El Salvador
The company’s Bitcoin push doesn’t stop in the U.S. Last November, Steak ’n Shake announced plans to expand into El Salvador, the world’s first country to adopt Bitcoin as legal tender. The announcement followed its participation in the Bitcoin Histórico event in San Salvador, where the brand hinted at deeper involvement in the country’s crypto-native economy.
Not every step has been smooth. In October, Steak ’n Shake briefly floated the idea of accepting Ether, drawing swift backlash from Bitcoin-focused customers. The company quickly walked back the plan and reaffirmed its Bitcoin-only stance—a move that appeared to resonate as sales momentum continued into the second half of the year.



