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Strike Users in US Can Now Get Paid in Bitcoin

Tested with professional athletes, the service is now widely available in 48 U.S. states.

Strike CEO Jack Mallers (Marie Uzcategui/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Strike, the startup best known for helping El Salvador adopt bitcoin, is letting its U.S. users instantly convert all or a portion of their paychecks into the original cryptocurrency. And they can do so without needing their employers to embrace bitcoin or carry it on their books.

The Pay Me in Bitcoin option, introduced Thursday, allows users to deposit their salaries directly to their Strike accounts and choose the amount that is automatically swapped and credited to their bitcoin balance. Strike is not charging a fee for the service.

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Strike began experimenting with the feature last year when National Football League player Russell Okung used Strike to split his $13 million salary 50-50 between bitcoin and fiat. Several other athletes have since followed in his footsteps. Now the service has been made widely available to Strike’s U.S. customers.

The expanded feature comes less than a month after Coinbase, the leading U.S. cryptocurrency exchange, announced that it will let users deposit all or part of their paychecks in crypto or dollars, also without a fee.

However, unlike Coinbase, which lists a smorgasbord of digital assets for trading, Strike is a staunchly bitcoin-focused shop.

Bitcoin as a savings vehicle

Founder and CEO Jack Mallers framed the bitcoin conversion option as a way for users to build wealth and save for things like their kids’ education or homeownership at a time when inflation is rearing its head and interest rates on savings accounts languish just above zero.

“You simply cannot save by holding dollars,” Mallers wrote in a blog post.

Although bitcoin’s price fluctuates wildly from minute to minute, proponents note that over time it has generally appreciated.

Mallers made waves this year with an impassioned speech at the Bitcoin 2021 conference about his work in El Salvador, which culminated in President Nayib Bukele’s adoption of the currency as legal tender. In the U.S., the Chicago-based entrepreneur sent a shot across the bows of Coinbase, PayPal, Square’s Cash App and other services by offering bitcoin purchases for nearly zero in fees. Strike is also making the technology behind Twitter’s bitcoin tipping feature open to the world through an application programming interface (API).

The bitcoin conversion feature is available in the U.S. except for New York and Hawaii, a Strike spokesperson said. The company now has money transmitter licenses in five states – Delaware, Michigan, Mississippi, New Mexico and Washington, according to a state regulator databasehttps://www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org/EntityDetails.aspx/COMPANY/1902919 – and has said it uses Prime Trust, a Nevada-chartered and regulated trust company, to offer services in other states.



Marc Hochstein

As Deputy Editor-in-Chief for Features, Opinion, Ethics and Standards, Marc oversaw CoinDesk's long-form content, set editorial policies and acted as the ombudsman for our industry-leading newsroom. He also spearheaded our nascent coverage of prediction markets and helped compile The Node, our daily email newsletter rounding up the biggest stories in crypto.

From November 2022 to June 2024 Marc was the Executive Editor of Consensus, CoinDesk's flagship annual event. He joined CoinDesk in 2017 as a managing editor and has steadily added responsibilities over the years.

Marc is a veteran journalist with more than 25 years' experience, including 17 years at the trade publication American Banker, the last three as editor-in-chief, where he was responsible for some of the earliest mainstream news coverage of cryptocurrency and blockchain technology.

DISCLOSURE: Marc holds BTC above CoinDesk's disclosure threshold of $1,000; marginal amounts of ETH, SOL, XMR, ZEC, MATIC and EGIRL; an Urbit planet (~fodrex-malmev); two ENS domain names (MarcHochstein.eth and MarcusHNYC.eth); and NFTs from the Oekaki (pictured), Lil Skribblers, SSRWives, and Gwar collections.

Marc Hochstein