Cryptocurrency payments provider Flexa has launched Lightning Network payments with select partners and merchants in El Salvador as the country rolls out bitcoin as legal tender.
Announced Tuesday, Flexa, sometimes called the “Stripe of crypto,” has added super-fast Lightning payments using bitcoin, which will power crypto payments in El Salvador using wallets such as Strike and the government-run Chivo.
Following a governmental edict, El Salvador has become the first country to make bitcoin a national currency, and as such the country becomes a testing ground for making volatile cryptocurrencies and the rails they run on usable for everyday payments.
And Flexa is not alone: Lightning firm OpenNode is powering a McDonald’s integration that briefly went viral on Tuesday.
The Lightning network is a technique of aggregating bitcoin payments and settling them instantly, with the net transaction later added to the Bitcoin blockchain.
How Flexa got there
Flexa has built wallet and payment infrastructure in the U.S. that allows users to spend multiple cryptocurrencies for point-of-sale purchases at merchants such as Nordstrom, Barnes & Noble, Express or Lowe’s.
“When this El Salvador regulation got put in place, we actually got approached by merchants and other entities in El Salvador asking for us to set this up for them in a compliant way, because they’re working with our counterparts in the U.S.,” Flexa co-founder Tyler Spalding told CoinDesk in an interview. “So there ended up being a really great opportunity to help merchants, and now banks, particularly, to be able to process these sorts of digital payments.”
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Spalding said a full list of merchants, partners and banks that Flexa is working with in El Salvador would be announced shortly. Flexa general counsel Daniel McCabe worked closely with the legal and compliance team at Crowell Moring in NYC and certain regulatory authorities in El Salvador to make the launch possible, Spalding added.
Behind the scenes, Flexa provides instant crypto payments at point of sale by sending the merchant authorization that the payment is being paid and cleared, while collateralizing the transaction until the crypto eventually comes to Flexa.
“Flexa enables any Lightning channel to be used, and we collateralize getting that lightning channel back on-chain,” said Spalding. “So, to a merchant, we can now guarantee that any lightning payment will 100% be settled with you in the future.”
In the meantime, El Salvador is still working out the kinks.
In the early hours of Tuesday morning, technical errors were registered with the Chivo wallet and the government interrupted its use to reinforce “technical aspects,” according to a government statement published on Tuesday.
Andrés Engler contributed reporting.