Starting March 1, Steak ’n Shake will begin paying hourly employees at company-owned restaurants a small Bitcoin bonus: $0.21 worth of BTC for every hour worked. The Bitcoin won’t be immediately spendable — it vests after two years — but the company says the idea is to help workers build long-term savings.
The 91-year-old burger chain announced the program through a partnership with Bitcoin rewards app Fold. CEO Will Reeves framed it as part of a broader shift, describing Steak ’n Shake as “a real bitcoin company, putting sound money into the hands of working Americans.”
A Long-Term Bet on Bitcoin
The math behind the pitch is ambitious.
According to Adam Simecka, founder of self-custody wallet Manna, a full-time minimum wage worker clocking 40 hours a week for 30 years could, in theory, retire with more than $3 million — assuming Bitcoin grows at an average of 20% per year.
Under that scenario, someone could start working at 16 and retire at 46, without raises or extra investments beyond the hourly Bitcoin bonus.
Of course, those projections depend entirely on Bitcoin’s long-term performance — something neither the company nor its employees can control.
Bitcoin Is Now Part of the Business Model
The worker bonus builds on Steak ’n Shake’s growing Bitcoin treasury strategy.
On January 18, the company disclosed a $10 million Bitcoin purchase, acquiring roughly 105 BTC. It also formalized a “Strategic Bitcoin Reserve,” meaning all customer Bitcoin payments are held on the balance sheet rather than converted into cash.
Executives say the approach ties customer spending directly to long-term Bitcoin accumulation — effectively turning burger sales into a steady stream of BTC.
Since enabling Lightning Network payments across U.S. locations in mid-May, the company says transaction fees have dropped by nearly 50% compared with credit cards. At the same time, same-store sales rose about 15% in the months that followed.
The rollout drew public support from Jack Dorsey, who has repeatedly backed the company’s Bitcoin-first approach.
Sales Are Rising — and Bitcoin Gets the Credit
Steak ’n Shake reported $69.3 million in Q2 2025 revenue, a 12% increase year over year. Executives attributed much of that growth to Bitcoin users, citing a 10.7% quarter-over-quarter rise in same-store sales.
Momentum carried into Q3, with same-store sales up 15% — outpacing major competitors like McDonald’s, Burger King, Taco Bell, and Starbucks during the same period.
Turning Burgers Into Bitcoin
Through its partnership with Fold, launched in October, Steak ’n Shake offered customers $5 in Bitcoin for buying branded items like the “Bitcoin Burger.” The rewards were redeemable through the Fold app.
The company also pledged to donate 210 satoshis for every “Bitcoin Meal” sold to OpenSats, which supports Bitcoin Core and open-source development.
“For many people, this will be the first time they ever own Bitcoin,” Reeves said. “And it will come from something as ordinary as grabbing a burger.”
The strategy deliberately ties Bitcoin to everyday spending, rather than speculation — making crypto feel less like a trade and more like a habit.
Going Global — and Staying Bitcoin-Only
Steak ’n Shake expanded into El Salvador in November after taking part in the Bitcoin Histórico event in San Salvador, marking its entry into the first country to adopt Bitcoin as legal tender.
The move followed strong performance in the U.S. and Europe, including France, Monaco, and Spain.
The company briefly tested the limits of its Bitcoin loyalty in October, when it polled followers about accepting Ether. After 53% of nearly 49,000 voters supported the idea — and Bitcoin advocates threatened a boycott — the poll was abruptly pulled.
“Poll suspended. Our allegiance is with Bitcoiners,” the company posted. “You have spoken.”
A Volatile Backdrop
The announcement comes amid renewed crypto market volatility. Bitcoin fell about 4% to roughly $88,000 on Wednesday during a sharp leverage unwind that triggered over $1 billion in liquidations across the market, according to CoinGlass.
Despite the turbulence, Steak ’n Shake appears committed to its Bitcoin-first strategy — betting that tying crypto to paychecks, payments, and burgers will pay off over the long run.



