- Jack Dorsey’s Square has launched a new Bitcoin payment system for merchants using its existing POS terminals via the Lightning Network.
- Merchants can choose to accept BTC or instantly convert to dollars, simplifying adoption and removing past hurdles like fees and volatility.
- The feature is rolling out during a strong bull cycle, possibly signaling Bitcoin’s shift from speculative asset to usable everyday currency.
Square, the payments company backed by Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey, just kicked off its new Bitcoin payments feature—and it’s already onboarding a wave of merchants. It’s a big moment for Bitcoin as it tries, once again, to break into real-world retail.
Now, businesses using Square’s point-of-sale terminals can accept Bitcoin straight from customers. No special gadgets or fancy upgrades needed. And the payments? They’ll be processed using the Lightning Network, so it’s fast and cheap.
BTC Hits the Checkout Counter
This rollout comes after months of testing behind the scenes. Merchants can either keep the Bitcoin they receive or instantly convert it to U.S. dollars if they prefer not to deal with volatility. That choice alone makes the whole setup way more appealing to small businesses.
Square (which is part of Block) already works with over 4 million sellers and handles more than $200 billion in annual payment volume. That’s a pretty big launchpad if you’re trying to take Bitcoin mainstream in the U.S.
Up to this point, actual BTC adoption in stores has been… let’s be honest, kinda weak. Even with Wall Street warming up to it. But Square’s feature tackles some of the long-standing pain points—slow confirmation times, high fees, awkward conversions—and wraps it all into something smooth and simple.
Right Time, Right Market
This news drops as Bitcoin’s enjoying a major bull run. It recently blasted through the $118K mark, fueled by a surge of ETF inflows and fresh waves of institutional interest. So yeah, the timing couldn’t be better.
Jack Dorsey’s been a loud supporter of Bitcoin as the currency of the internet, not just an investment asset. And now, that idea’s getting a real shot at becoming tangible. The new system doesn’t need third-party apps or middlemen—it’s Bitcoin, from your wallet to the register, just like that.
Right now, it’s still a limited release. Broader access is expected in 2026. But the fact that onboarding has officially started? That’s a pretty big deal.
It’s possible we’re watching the early stages of Bitcoin’s jump from a digital vault into daily spending. Not just HODL. Swipe. Tap. Buy.