
Residents can now pay Lugano taxes, fines and city invoices in Bitcoin or USDT, with instant conversion to Swiss francs.
Summary
- Swiss city of Lugano adopts Bitcoin payment push
- Over 350 merchants use Lightning and the MyLugano app, offering up to 10% LVGA cashback to close a genuine circular economy loop.
- The Plan ₿ Forum now draws 4,000+ attendees as Lugano positions itself as a working Bitcoin hub, not just a marketing slogan.
On the granite steps outside Lugano’s city hall, the most common question used to be about permit forms or parking disputes; now clerks say they hear a different one several times a day: “Can I pay this in Bitcoin?”. In most cities, that would still be a punchline. In Lugano, the answer is an unremarkable “Yes, of course.”
Under the city’s Plan ₿ initiative, residents can now settle virtually any municipal invoice—income and corporate taxes, parking fines, tuition fees, waste collection charges—with Bitcoin (BTC) or Tether’s dollar-pegged USDT. “Invoices issued by the City of Lugano can be settled using BTC, Bitcoin on Lightning Network and USDT,” the municipality states bluntly on its payments page, adding that there is “no amount limit,” even for seven‑figure tax bills.
The microstructure matters. Payments route either directly on Lightning or via Bitcoin Suisse as a processing partner, which charges a 1% fee embedded in the FX rate to manage the crypto‑to‑franc conversion risk. For small merchants and café owners who used to swallow 2.5–3.4% card fees on every cappuccino, that difference is not an academic basis point spread—it is their margin.
City officials are quick to stress that Lugano is not stockpiling a Bitcoin treasury. “Any amount paid in cryptocurrency will be immediately converted into Swiss francs and paid to the City,” the guidance notes, positioning crypto less as a balance-sheet bet and more as an access rail for residents who already hold BTC or USDT. Ignore the maximalist rhetoric for a moment; structurally, this is payment plumbing, not a HODL manifesto.
Yet the circular economy layer built on top of that plumbing looks far more ideological. Through the city‑backed MyLugano app, shoppers earn up to 10% cashback in LVGA tokens when they pay with crypto at participating businesses, and those tokens can loop straight back into municipal services, public parking, and childcare fees. “It proves that a circular economy is possible right now,” local promoters like to say; on the ground that means people literally buying espresso on Via Nassa with Bitcoin and getting LVGA they later burn on kindergarten invoices.
Merchant coverage is no longer a talking point on a slide deck; it is visible at street level. Plan ₿ and the city say more than 350 merchants now accept Lightning payments, a number that shows up not just in press releases but in the sticker clusters on shop doors from gelaterias to vintage watch resellers. One shop owner quoted in recent coverage put it bluntly: “Bitcoin fees are below 1%, my card terminal takes up to 3.4% — I don’t need a philosophy degree to choose.”
The institutional signal is just as clear on the conference circuit. The fourth Plan ₿ Forum, held on October 24–25, 2025 at the convention centre and Villa Ciani, drew more than 4,000 participants from 64 countries, a 140% jump from the initiative’s launch in 2022 and a 38% rise from last year. “Lugano is evolving into a working model of Bitcoin adoption and open technology,” Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino said at the event, arguing that “people are using Bitcoin for payments… and that momentum continues to grow every year.”.
For traders watching market structure rather than city budgets, the Lugano rollout lands in a weird tape. As BTC grinds just under 90,000 dollars in thin year‑end liquidity, with ETFs leaking coins and perps showing only mildly positive funding after a failed sweep of Monday’s low, this is not the kind of narrative that sends price vertical tomorrow morning. But still, it hardens a floor: every citizen invoice paid in BTC and flipped to francs is quiet sell pressure, yet every Lightning POS installed is another reason locals keep a hot wallet topped up, another slow‑burn demand source when the next panic wick flushes leveraged longs.
Does this change the trade today? Probably not; this rally still dies the second BTC meaningfully slips back below recent ETF inflow levels and the 85,000–86,000 area turns from bid to air. But anyone betting that Bitcoin will stay a purely speculative macro instrument, detached from actual municipal cash flows, now has to explain why a lakeside Swiss tax office is more comfortable with on‑chain money than most G20 treasuries.
For Lugano, the calculus is simpler. “Plan ₿ brings together the builders and thinkers turning decentralization into something real,” Ardoino argued; the city, for its part, seems less interested in the slogans than in the fact that cafés get paid, taxes clear, and merchants shave a couple of percentage points off their fees. In other words: less moon, more receipts.
