Canada Is Proposing a Nationwide Crypto ATM Ban. Bitcoin Depot Has 220 Machines There
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Canada's Spring Economic Update released in April 2026 included a proposal to ban crypto ATMs nationwide, citing their use by scammers and money launderers as the primary justification. Under the proposal, Canadians would still be permitted to buy digital assets from brick-and-mortar money services businesses, but the ATM machines — which allow anonymous or near-anonymous cash-to-crypto conversion with minimal friction — would be prohibited entirely. Bitcoin Depot reported approximately 220 machines deployed across Canada at the time of publication, meaning a successful ban would eliminate a meaningful portion of the company's operational footprint at exactly the moment it is already struggling with going concern doubts from US regulatory pressures. The Canadian proposal follows a pattern that has been developing across North American jurisdictions simultaneously: Ottawa's proposal mirrors the logic behind the municipal ordinances and state enforcement actions that have been accumulating in the US throughout 2024 and 2025.The timing creates compounding pressure on Bitcoin Depot that would be difficult to absorb even for a financially healthy operator. The company is simultaneously managing $20 million in accumulated legal judgments, revenue down $80.7 million year-over-year, a net loss of $9.5 million in Q1, a leadership transition, and now the prospect of losing its entire Canadian deployment if the federal proposal advances to legislation. The Canadian ban proposal is not yet law and faces the usual legislative process, but the political momentum behind it — driven by documented cases of elderly Canadians losing significant sums through ATM-based scams — makes meaningful opposition difficult. For Bitcoin Depot, the Canadian situation represents both a direct revenue threat and a signal that the regulatory headwinds it faces in the US are part of a coordinated continental shift in how governments view crypto ATM operators rather than a jurisdictionally isolated problem that can be managed one state at a time.