The American fast-food chain Steak ’n Shake has expanded its Bitcoin exposure, adding $5 million worth of Bitcoin to its balance sheet and lifting its Strategic Bitcoin Reserve to roughly $15 million.
The move comes amid a sharp improvement in operating performance, with the company reporting an 18% increase in same-store sales so far in 2026, a gain management links directly to its Bitcoin payment strategy and growing support from so-called “Bitcoin champions.”
Steak ’n Shake, a subsidiary of Biglari Holdings, began accepting Bitcoin payments via the Lightning Network in May 2025, marking what executives have described internally as a “Burger-to-Bitcoin” transformation. Since then, Bitcoin has shifted from a payment experiment to a core treasury and branding strategy.
The company’s 2026 performance builds on momentum established last year. Same-store sales rose 15.6% in Q3 2025, followed by further acceleration as Bitcoin payments became more visible across locations. Management has pointed to increased customer engagement and repeat visits tied to the novelty and efficiency of Lightning-based payments.
Notably, Steak ’n Shake does not immediately convert Bitcoin revenue into cash. All Bitcoin received from customer payments is routed directly into the company’s treasury, reinforcing its long-term reserve strategy rather than treating crypto as a transient payment rail.
Operationally, the Lightning Network has also delivered cost advantages. The company reports that Lightning payments have reduced credit-card processing fees by nearly 50%, improving margins in a sector where transaction costs are typically thin and highly sensitive.
Building on its treasury-first approach, Steak ’n Shake is extending Bitcoin integration beyond payments and reserves into employee compensation. Beginning March 1, 2026, the company will introduce a Bitcoin bonus program for hourly workers, a first for a major U.S. fast-food chain.
Under the program, employees will earn $0.21 in Bitcoin for every hour worked. These bonuses will be subject to a two-year vesting period before they can be accessed or sold, aligning incentives with long-term retention rather than short-term payouts.
Management has framed the initiative as both a retention tool and a way to gradually introduce employees to Bitcoin ownership without replacing existing wage structures.
With total holdings now estimated at approximately 167.7 BTC, Steak ’n Shake ranks among the top 100 corporate Bitcoin holders globally. While its reserve remains modest compared with large treasury-centric firms, the strategy mirrors a broader corporate shift pioneered by companies such as MicroStrategy and MARA Holdings, which have used Bitcoin as a core reserve asset to enhance balance-sheet resilience.
In Steak ’n Shake’s case, the approach is distinct. Rather than positioning Bitcoin purely as a treasury hedge, the company has embedded it across payments, reserves, and employee incentives, turning digital asset adoption into an operational and cultural differentiator.
Steak ’n Shake’s latest Bitcoin purchase and compensation initiative illustrate how crypto adoption can extend beyond balance-sheet strategy into day-to-day business operations. By combining Lightning payments, direct treasury inflows, and employee bonuses, the company is testing whether Bitcoin can function as both financial infrastructure and brand catalyst.
If sales growth and cost efficiencies persist, the model could offer a template for consumer-facing businesses looking to integrate Bitcoin without relying solely on speculative treasury accumulation.
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