Starting March 30, Square enables Lightning payments by default across 4 million merchants. Zero fees through 2026, instant settlement, no chargebacks.
On March 30, 2026, something will quietly change at four million point-of-sale terminals around the world. Square — the payment platform owned by Block, Inc. — will flip Bitcoin Lightning payments to on by default. Not opt-in. Not buried in settings. On.
Merchants who do nothing will wake up to a checkout flow that accepts Bitcoin. Those who don't want it can turn it off. But the default has shifted, and defaults are where adoption lives.
This is the largest single merchant onboarding event in Lightning Network history. It deserves a closer look at what it means, how it works, and why it matters.
The implementation is deliberately simple. When a customer selects Bitcoin at checkout, the Square terminal generates a QR code — a standard Lightning invoice. The customer scans it with any Lightning-compatible wallet (Phoenix, Muun, Wallet of Satoshi, or dozens of others), confirms, and the payment settles in seconds.
No new hardware. No special training. No waiting for six confirmations. The existing Square terminal handles everything through a software update.
Merchants get three options for how they receive the money:
The transaction limit is $600 per payment. Square handles the exchange rate calculation, settlement notification, and conversion — all the complexity sits behind the terminal screen, invisible to both merchant and customer.
This is where it gets interesting.
Square is charging zero fees on Bitcoin Lightning transactions through the end of 2026. Starting 2027, the fee becomes a flat 1%.
Compare this to the standard card payment infrastructure:
| Payment Method | Fee | Chargebacks | Settlement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Credit card | 2.5–3.5% | Yes | 1–3 days |
| Debit card | 1.5–2.5% | Yes | 1–2 days |
| Lightning (2026) | 0% | No | Seconds |
| Lightning (2027+) | 1% | No | Seconds |
The chargeback point matters more than people realize. Chargeback fraud costs US merchants roughly $40 billion annually. Bitcoin transactions are final — there is no mechanism for a customer to reverse a completed Lightning payment through their bank. For merchants in high-chargeback categories (restaurants, e-commerce, services), this alone can justify the switch.
Square currently serves approximately four million merchants across eight countries, including the United States, United Kingdom, France, Japan, Australia, Canada, Ireland, and Spain. The March 30 rollout targets all eligible merchants globally, though regulatory constraints may delay activation in some jurisdictions.
The initial US rollout began in November 2025 as opt-in, excluding New York. The shift to default-on across all markets represents a fundamental change in strategy — from letting interested merchants find the feature to making uninterested merchants actively reject it.
This is how technology adoption actually works. Nobody opted into receiving email. Nobody opted into contactless payments. The technology became the default, and the holdouts eventually stopped holding out.
Jack Dorsey's commitment to Bitcoin is not performative. Block holds 8,888 BTC on its corporate balance sheet — approximately $600 million at current prices — accumulated through a monthly dollar-cost averaging program since 2020. The company ranks 14th among public companies by Bitcoin holdings.
Beyond Square, Block's Bitcoin infrastructure includes:
When Dorsey said in 2021 that "Bitcoin changes everything," he appears to have meant it operationally, not just philosophically. Block is building a vertically integrated Bitcoin payments stack — from consumer wallet to merchant terminal to corporate treasury. The Square Lightning integration is the merchant-facing piece of that stack clicking into place.
Notably, Block recently announced it would also support stablecoins on its platform — a concession to customer demand that Dorsey reportedly opposed personally. The distinction matters: Bitcoin is the conviction bet; everything else is a business decision.
The network that Square is plugging into has never been larger by capacity, even as it consolidates structurally.
| Metric | Current (March 2026) |
|---|---|
| Total capacity | ~5,600 BTC (all-time high) |
| Public nodes | ~15,000–17,000 |
| Public channels | ~40,000–48,000 |
| Largest single transfer | $1,000,000 (January 2026) |
Node count has declined from a 2022 peak of 20,700, while capacity has grown. This reflects consolidation — fewer, larger, better-capitalized nodes handling more volume. Whether this centralization trend is a concern depends on your threat model, but the network's raw throughput capacity has never been higher.
The timing of Square's integration coincides with several other Lightning milestones:
These are infrastructure developments, not speculative narratives. Each one reduces friction for a different type of user — merchants, holders, businesses, stablecoin users — converging on the same payment rail.
There is a tendency in Bitcoin commentary to either over-hype adoption milestones ("This changes everything!") or dismiss them ("Nobody will use it"). The truth about Square's Lightning integration is more measured and more significant than either extreme.
It will not make millions of people start paying for coffee with Bitcoin next month. Most customers don't have Lightning wallets. Most merchants won't notice the feature exists. The transaction cap of $600 limits use cases. In jurisdictions with capital gains tax on Bitcoin spending, the tax friction alone discourages everyday use.
What it does is eliminate the supply-side bottleneck. The reason you can't pay with Bitcoin at most stores is not that the technology doesn't work — it's that merchants don't accept it. As of March 30, four million merchants will accept it by default. The constraint shifts entirely to the demand side.
This is how payment networks grow. Visa didn't succeed because consumers demanded it. It succeeded because merchants couldn't afford not to accept it, and then consumers found it everywhere they went. Square is executing the same playbook — not by convincing merchants that Bitcoin is the future, but by making Lightning acceptance the path of least resistance.
The zero-fee introductory period is the accelerant. For a small business processing $500,000 in annual card transactions at 3% fees, that's $15,000 in annual processing costs. Every Lightning transaction that displaces a card transaction during the zero-fee window is pure savings. Even at 1% in 2027, the economics remain favorable — and with no chargebacks, the effective savings are larger than the fee difference suggests.
El Salvador made Bitcoin legal tender in September 2021. It was a top-down mandate in a small economy, and the results were mixed — adoption was real but limited, hampered by a poorly designed government wallet and public skepticism.
Square's approach is the inverse: bottom-up, opt-out, embedded in existing commercial infrastructure, requiring no government mandate and no ideological commitment from merchants. A coffee shop owner in Portland doesn't need to believe in sound money to accept Lightning payments. They just need to not turn it off.
This is Bitcoin meeting commerce where commerce already happens. Not in a Bitcoin conference demo. Not in a country of 6.5 million people. In four million businesses that already process billions in daily transactions, across eight countries, through hardware that's already on the counter.
Whether this translates to meaningful transaction volume remains to be seen. But the infrastructure is now in place for it to happen — and it will be in place by default.