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Customer USD -> Customer BTC: 1% + $0.15 (Coinbase)

Customer BTC -> Merchant BTC: $0.06 (transaction fees, currently abnormally high due to price spike)

Merchant BTC -> Merchant USD: 0.99% (Bitpay)

Total: 1.99% + $0.24

Compare: credit cards and Paypal (2.9% + $0.30)

So even there it works out fine.



It's hardly the fee-free utopia though is it?

And I can already transfer to other individuals for no charge.


The mere possibility of doing it is much more important than the lack of fees.

> And I can already transfer to other individuals for no charge.

Within your own country/a few other countries like it. Transferring money across borders, especially outside the west is quite a bit harder than you'd think.


Don't forget to include the fee's from an unstable method of exchange (bitcoin) depreciating or appreciating between the times you exchange it for USD.


Bitpay assumes the volatility risk for customers and merchants, and charges at most 1% for their cheapest platform, so none of this is really an issue - is it?


Bitpay is when the customer pays in bitcoin. But to get bitcoin you still need to exchange for USD somewhere. And that's where the cost of exchange risk comes in.




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