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Section 12 · Intermediate

Bitcoin Around the World

Intermediate

⏱ Estimated reading time: 15 minutes

Bitcoin adoption by country. Regulatory environments globally. Bitcoin in developing countries. Circular economies. Cross-border payments.

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Bitcoin's Global Adoption: Where the World Stands

Bitcoin isn't just a Silicon Valley investment trend. It's a genuinely global phenomenon — adopted differently in different places, for different reasons, by people with very different needs. In wealthy Western nations, it's largely an investment asset and inflation hedge. In Nigeria, it's a lifeline against currency collapse. In El Salvador, it's legal tender. In Iran, it's an escape from sanctions. Bitcoin's use cases are as diverse as its users.

Global Ownership Estimates

Exact ownership is impossible to measure, but credible estimates as of 2024 suggest:

  • ~300 million people globally own some cryptocurrency (majority is Bitcoin)
  • Largest absolute user bases: USA, India, Nigeria, Brazil, Turkey
  • Highest per-capita adoption: emerging markets facing currency instability
  • All 7 continents have Bitcoin users and nodes

Different Needs, Different Use Cases

Bitcoin adoption in wealthy countries vs. developing ones looks very different:

  • Developed world: store of value, inflation hedge, portfolio diversification
  • Developing world: currency debasement protection, cross-border payments, banking the unbanked
  • Authoritarian regimes: capital flight, financial freedom, evading censorship
"Bitcoin is a human rights technology. For people living under financial repression, censorship, or currency collapse, it isn't an investment — it's a lifeline." — Alex Gladstein, Human Rights Foundation

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This content is written and approved by Marius, AI-assisted using Claude (Anthropic), with references curated from: Jameson Lopp (lopp.net, PD) · Satoshi Nakamoto Institute (nakamotoinstitute.org, CC BY-SA 4.0) · bitcoin.org (MIT) · Saylor Academy (CC BY).

El Salvador: The World's First Bitcoin Nation-State Experiment

On September 7th, 2021, El Salvador became the first country in history to adopt Bitcoin as legal tender. President Nayib Bukele introduced the Bitcoin Law, requiring all businesses to accept Bitcoin for payment and making it legal tender alongside the US dollar. The world watched — some with excitement, others with deep scepticism. Three years on, the experiment has produced real results, real problems, and invaluable real-world data.

What the Law Did

  • Made Bitcoin legal tender alongside the USD (El Salvador has used USD since 2001)
  • Launched the government's "Chivo" wallet with $30 in BTC for every citizen who signed up
  • Installed Bitcoin ATMs across the country (the "Bitcoin office" network)
  • Made Bitcoin payments legal for all debts, taxes, and contracts
  • Built "Bitcoin City" at the base of the Conchagua volcano, funded by volcanic geothermal energy

What Actually Happened

Adoption was slower and more complicated than the government hoped. Many Salvadorans used the free $30 once and returned to cash. Merchants accepted Bitcoin technically but often converted immediately to USD. Remittances — the original promise — showed mixed results. The IMF pushed back hard. But Bitcoin Beach (El Zonte) — the community-driven Lightning economy that predated the law — has genuinely thrived and serves as the most honest case study.

"El Salvador's experiment is messy and imperfect. But no other country has provided this level of real-world data on national Bitcoin adoption." — Bitcoin researcher commentary

What It Proved

That sovereign adoption is possible. That Lightning can power a functioning local economy. That grassroots Bitcoin communities build more lasting adoption than government mandates. And that the world was paying attention.

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This content is written and approved by Marius, AI-assisted using Claude (Anthropic), with references curated from: Jameson Lopp (lopp.net, PD) · Satoshi Nakamoto Institute (nakamotoinstitute.org, CC BY-SA 4.0) · bitcoin.org (MIT) · Saylor Academy (CC BY).

Bitcoin and Remittances: Sending Money Home Without Losing 10%

$800 billion is sent across borders as remittances every year — migrants sending money to their families back home. The average fee for these transfers is 6.2%. On $800 billion, that's $50 billion in fees. Paid to Western Union, MoneyGram, and similar services. Taken from some of the world's poorest families. Bitcoin and Lightning Network have the potential to eliminate nearly all of these fees — and the early evidence is compelling.

The Traditional Remittance Problem

  • High fees: 6–10% for many corridors (Africa-to-Africa routes often exceed 10%)
  • Slow: typically 1–5 business days
  • Exclusionary: requires bank accounts, identity documents, physical locations
  • Geographically limited: many corridors have no competitive services

How Bitcoin/Lightning Changes This

With Bitcoin and Lightning, a worker in the US can send money to family in El Salvador, Nigeria, or the Philippines in seconds, for fractions of a cent in fees. The recipient doesn't need a bank account — just a mobile phone with a Lightning wallet. Services like Strike use this infrastructure to offer near-zero fee cross-border transfers, converting USD → BTC → USD in the background automatically.

Cross-Border Remittances

THE TRADITIONAL WAY Sender $100 Banks / Transfer Agents / FX Takes 6-10% + 3-5 Business Days Family $92 THE BITCOIN WAY Sender $100 Lightning Network Takes almost 0% + 2 Seconds Family $99.99

By removing rent-seeking intermediaries, Bitcoin and the Lightning Network ensure that the money sent by migrant workers actually reaches their families, instantly.

"When I send money to my family in the Philippines using Bitcoin, I'm not giving 8% to a money transfer company. That 8% is food. It matters." — Real user testimony, cited in Human Rights Foundation research

Challenges and Honest Limitations

Bitcoin remittances still face real barriers: recipients need smartphones, digital literacy, and a way to convert to local currency. Regulatory uncertainty in some corridors creates friction. Last-mile cash-out remains a challenge in rural areas. These are solvable problems — and they're being solved — but acknowledging them matters for an honest picture.

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This content is written and approved by Marius, AI-assisted using Claude (Anthropic), with references curated from: Jameson Lopp (lopp.net, PD) · Satoshi Nakamoto Institute (nakamotoinstitute.org, CC BY-SA 4.0) · bitcoin.org (MIT) · Saylor Academy (CC BY).

Bitcoin in Africa: The Continent Where Bitcoin Is Most Needed

Africa is not the future of Bitcoin adoption — it's happening now. Sub-Saharan Africa has some of the world's most compelling Bitcoin use cases, driven by genuine financial necessity: currency debasement, inflation, banking exclusion, high remittance fees, and cross-border payment friction. In Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya, and South Africa, Bitcoin isn't a speculative asset. It's a practical tool for financial survival and self-determination.

Why Africa Has the Most Compelling Bitcoin Use Cases

  • Currency instability: Nigeria's naira has lost 70%+ of its value against the dollar in recent years; Zimbabwe's inflation history is well-documented
  • Unbanked populations: over 57% of sub-Saharan Africans remain unbanked, yet mobile phone penetration is high
  • Remittances: Africa receives over $100 billion/year in remittances — among the highest-fee corridors in the world
  • Cross-border trade: 54 African nations, 42 currencies — cross-border business is expensive and slow

Nigeria: Africa's Bitcoin Leader

Despite a government ban on financial institutions facilitating crypto transactions (partially lifted in 2023), Nigeria has consistently ranked among the top countries globally for peer-to-peer Bitcoin trading volume. When the government banned it, Nigerians moved to P2P platforms and cash settlements. Bitcoin adoption here wasn't speculative — it was defensive, driven by naira collapse and capital flight restrictions.

"In Africa, Bitcoin is not a technology trend. For many people it's the difference between preserving their savings and watching them evaporate." — Alex Gladstein, HRF

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This content is written and approved by Marius, AI-assisted using Claude (Anthropic), with references curated from: Jameson Lopp (lopp.net, PD) · Satoshi Nakamoto Institute (nakamotoinstitute.org, CC BY-SA 4.0) · bitcoin.org (MIT) · Saylor Academy (CC BY).

Bitcoin Beach: How a Salvadoran Village Proved Lightning Works

Before El Salvador's government mandated Bitcoin, before Nayib Bukele made headlines, before any national Bitcoin law existed — a small fishing village called El Zonte was running an entire local economy on Lightning Network. They called it Bitcoin Beach. It became the most cited proof-of-concept in Bitcoin's history, and it was built not by a government or corporation, but by a community of Salvadorans and a handful of Bitcoin believers.

The Bitcoin Beach Origin Story

In 2019, an anonymous Bitcoin donor gave a sum to a small Salvadoran NGO in El Zonte with one condition: it must be distributed to the local community in Bitcoin — not converted to dollars. This forced the creation of a local Bitcoin economy from scratch: local stores, fishermen, surf shops, and families all had to learn to use Bitcoin wallets, spend Bitcoin, and earn Bitcoin. Lightning Network was still nascent. But it worked.

What Made El Zonte Special

  • Entire local circular economy: pay for groceries, haircuts, bus rides in Bitcoin
  • Works without bank accounts — most residents were unbanked
  • Lightning made it practical: near-instant, near-free transactions for small daily purchases
  • Community education model — locals taught locals, not outsiders imposing technology
"El Zonte didn't need a Bitcoin law. They built the economy first. The law followed." — Bitcoin Beach community summary

The Legacy: El Salvador's Inspiration

Bitcoin Beach directly influenced El Salvador's Bitcoin Law. Bukele visited El Zonte. The Strike app partnered with Bitcoin Beach. The model travelled globally — Bitcoin Lake in Guatemala, Bitcoin Ekasi in South Africa, Bitcoin Jungle in another part of Costa Rica — communities replicating the El Zonte approach around the world.

Want to go deeper?


This content is written and approved by Marius, AI-assisted using Claude (Anthropic), with references curated from: Jameson Lopp (lopp.net, PD) · Satoshi Nakamoto Institute (nakamotoinstitute.org, CC BY-SA 4.0) · bitcoin.org (MIT) · Saylor Academy (CC BY).

Bitcoin Circular Economies: Earning, Spending, and Living on Bitcoin

A Bitcoin circular economy is a community or ecosystem where participants earn Bitcoin, spend Bitcoin, save in Bitcoin, and rarely need to convert to fiat currency. The idea challenges the assumption that Bitcoin can only be an investment to eventually cash out into dollars. In several communities around the world, it's possible to live entirely in a Bitcoin economy — no bank required.

What Makes a Circular Economy

For a circular economy to function, three things must be present:

  • Merchants accepting Bitcoin — coffee shops, grocery stores, services, landlords
  • Employers or clients paying in Bitcoin — so workers receive Bitcoin income directly
  • Community education — enough local understanding to transact confidently

Lightning Network is essential for most circular economies — base-layer Bitcoin fees make small daily transactions impractical. Lightning makes paying for a $3 cup of coffee viable. Explore the global Bitcoin ecosystem in our Orange Pages directory.

Examples Around the World

  • Bitcoin Beach (El Zonte, El Salvador) — the original; running since 2019
  • Bitcoin Ekasi (South Africa) — modelled on El Zonte, serving the Mossel Bay township community
  • Bitcoin Lake (Guatemala) — Lake Atitlán community circular economy
  • Bitcoin Jungle (Costa Rica) — Uvita area business and resident network
"The goal is not to swap bitcoin for dollars. The goal is to make it so you never need to." — Bitcoin circular economy ethos

Challenges for Circular Economies

Sustainable circular economies require critical mass — if too few merchants accept Bitcoin, workers convert to fiat immediately. Tax complexity around Bitcoin-denominated wages varies by jurisdiction. Price volatility can discourage savings. And the most successful circular economies have required years of patient community education, not overnight adoption. They're promising models, not guaranteed outcomes.

Want to go deeper?


This content is written and approved by Marius, AI-assisted using Claude (Anthropic), with references curated from: Jameson Lopp (lopp.net, PD) · Satoshi Nakamoto Institute (nakamotoinstitute.org, CC BY-SA 4.0) · bitcoin.org (MIT) · Saylor Academy (CC BY).

Key Takeaways

  • Bitcoin adoption is highest in countries with currency instability, banking exclusion, and high remittance costs — not just wealthy Western markets.
  • El Salvador became the first country to adopt Bitcoin as legal tender in 2021 — providing the world's first national-scale adoption data.
  • Lightning Network can reduce international remittance fees from 6–10% to near-zero, directly benefiting some of the world's poorest families.
  • Bitcoin adoption in Africa is driven by currency debasement, banking exclusion, and the world's most expensive remittance corridors.
  • Bitcoin Beach (El Zonte, El Salvador) proved that a Lightning circular economy can work without government mandate — built by community, not policy.
  • Circular economies require critical mass: enough merchants, employers paying in bitcoin, and community education to sustain the loop.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which countries have adopted Bitcoin?

El Salvador made Bitcoin legal tender in 2021 — the first country to do so. The Central African Republic briefly followed. Many other countries have progressive regulations including Switzerland, Portugal, Singapore, the UAE, and several US states.

Is Bitcoin legal in my country?

Bitcoin is legal in most countries including the US, UK, EU nations, Canada, Australia, and Japan. A few countries have banned or restricted it, including China (for trading) and a handful of others. Check your local regulations — our Section 6 covers this in detail.

Can Bitcoin help the unbanked?

Yes. About 1.4 billion adults globally lack access to traditional banking. Bitcoin requires only a smartphone and internet connection — no bank account, credit check, or government ID. It enables people to save, send, and receive money independently.

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