Steak ‘n Shake credits Bitcoin for company growth

by admin

Steak’ n Shake says US same-store sales jumped about 16% in July and wants Bitcoin to share the credit. However, one figure remains conspicuously absent: how many customers actually used it.

So, is the PR attached to Bitcoin now worth more than the chain itself?

In a July 10 post, the burger chain said its month-to-date increase came on top of about 16% growth in the comparable period a year earlier. It thanked loyal patrons and Bitcoiners, said Bitcoin payments save money compared with credit cards, and said those savings were being reinvested in healthier ingredients.

The 16% growth figure comes from Steak’ n Shake. Yet the company has not revealed how many customers paid with Bitcoin, how much they spent, or what share of orders used BTC.

Without those numbers, there is no way to separate Bitcoin’s effect from the pull of the campaign itself, price changes, promotions, menu updates, or shifts in the restaurant mix.

The company posted,

Anyone who doubts the power of Bitcoin is making a BIG mistake.

The company’s fee claim stops at the transaction level

Steak ’n Shake began accepting Bitcoin at U.S. locations in May 2025. It later said it was adding the Bitcoin it received to a strategic reserve. Those moves made Bitcoin part of the brand and a checkout option.

Bitcoin can draw customers through the door even when few pay with it, while every Bitcoin order may cost less to process. The missing number is the amount of business that actually moves through it.

As of July 16, Steak’ n Shake still has not revealed any Bitcoin info on order numbers, how much those orders were worth, or how much it actually saved on fees. It also offered no store-level data showing whether customers returned to pay with Bitcoin or how promotions shaped adoption. That gap prevents measurement of the size of any payment-driven effect.

At the Bitcoin 2026 conference, Steak’ n Shake executive Michael Boes said Bitcoin transactions cost the chain roughly 50% less to process than traditional card transactions. He also said the company would save about $6 million a year if every credit-card customer switched to Bitcoin.

Boes also said Steak’ n Shake’s total customer count had increased by roughly 2 million year over year after the Bitcoin rollout. The presentation did not identify those customers as Bitcoin payers or disclose a method for attributing their visits to the payment option.

The company’s Bitcoin payment terms do add useful detail. Menu prices remain denominated in U.S. dollars, checkout uses a third-party Bitcoin payment provider, and Steak’ n Shake says it adds no Bitcoin payment fee. Customers may still face wallet, network, conversion, or exchange-rate costs.

So, the evidence supports a potential merchant cost advantage for orders paid in Bitcoin, but does not indicate whether enough orders use the rail to produce material savings.

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Sales were already rising amid a wider overhaul

Biglari Holdings, Steak’ n Shake’s parent company, reported growth before the July claim. Its first-quarter filing showed 10% domestic same-store sales growth and about 13% growth at franchise-partner restaurants for the period ended March 31.

Those earlier figures establish that the company’s sales recovery was already underway.

First-quarter restaurant marketing expense rose to $5.427 million from $3.232 million a year earlier, an increase of about 67.9%. Company-store food cost rose to 31.4% of net sales from 30.0%, primarily because of the switch to 100% beef tallow.

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