Let’s face it, we all hate paying bills, but the ability to pay them with digital currency might help put a smile on your face.
Earlier this year, CoinDesk reported on the launch of
Bylls,
a Canada-based service that allows users to pay bills in bitcoin at
more than 6,000 organizations, including the government. It was one of
the world’s first.
Now, new services are popping up around the globe that allow you to pay for everything from basic utilities to taxes in bitcoin.
Like
merchant bitcoin payment processors, bill payment services solve the
problem of requiring every organization to develop its own bitcoin
payment infrastructure.
The different systems available now have
varying degrees of utility, from just a few cooperating payees, to use
for everything from credit card bills to taxes.
Living Room of Satoshi, Australia
An Australia-based service called
Living Room of Satoshi (LRoS) now promises to pay anyone on that country’s BPAY network in bitcoin for no cost.
BPAY
is a universal bill-payment system in Australia that allows people to
pay by phone or online by entering two numeric codes. Nearly every major
business and organization uses the system, including federal and state
governments, and credit card companies.
To use Living Room of
Satoshi, users simply enter the BPAY Biller and Reference codes plus the
amount, and the site generates a bitcoin address/QR code. BPAY will
issue a receipt within 30 minutes.
Co-founder Daniel Alexiuc is a long-time developer and entrepreneur, whose previous venture was an e-commerce company shipping
live aquarium fish through the mail.
Experience
with paying transaction fees to banks and payment systems as a small
business, plus other experience working for banks and payment processors
himself, got him interested in bitcoin, he told CoinDesk. About the
company he said:
“There are no fees to use LRoS. And
we don’t make any money on the exchange rate either. Ideally, Living
Room of Satoshi will always be a free service for the users. How is this
possible? Because of our plan.”
The plan is to help
build the bitcoin economy in Australia, and Alexiuc’s vision is to see a
‘Pay with Bitcoin’ option everywhere, with QR codes printed directly
onto physical and digital bills.
Paying bills with bitcoin via
BPAY is his way of getting people used to the idea of making such
day-to-day payments, and presenting a large user base as a business case
to potential companies in future.
Launched in 1997, BPAY was the
world’s first
“single bill payment service accepted across the banking system”,
according to its website. Since 2002 it has also offered BPAY View,
which delivers bills electronically to online banking sites, enabling
payment directly from accounts.
In financial year 2012-13, BPAY
processed A$265bn worth of payments. The average bill payment today is
A$785. BPAY also has a ‘third-party service provider’ programme that
allows software developers, printing companies, consultants, and other
providers to link other services to the network, which is how Living
Room of Satoshi was able to plug in bitcoin.
Quantified, Singapore
Like Living Room of Satoshi, Singapore-based
Quantified
also allows access to multiple companies and services, including
government, meaning residents may also pay taxes and other governmental
fees with bitcoin.
The company, which launched in March, offers a number of bitcoin exchange services of which bill payments is one.
One
of its founders, Finnish entrepreneur Ville Oehman, describes the
service as like using a debit card to pay someone in a foreign currency:
they still receive the amount in their local currency and are never
aware what was used in the original payment. Thus, bitcoin is exchanged
and transferred to the payee in Singapore dollars.
Entering your
bill details into Quantified’s online form generates an email with a
bitcoin address and QR code, which the user simply pays and then waits
for an emailed confirmation once the bill is processed.
Bitcoin values are generated via local exchange
itBit’s API.
Quantified
charges a 2.9% commission on the Singapore dollar (SGD) value of the
transaction, and since bitcoin transactions are taxed in Singapore, a 7%
of the commission itself is added as Goods and Services Tax (GST).
enBitcoins, Argentina
Launched in December amid the height of bitcoin’s most recent
price boom, Argentina-based
enBitcoins is the product of former Internet entrepreneurs who are now focusing primarily on the bitcoin space.
Founder
MatÃas Alejo Garcia
indicated he was considering a number of opportunities – including
ventures into 3D printing and drone delivery – before turning his
attention to bitcoin last year.
The idea arose from the difficulty
the developers had in securing bitcoin in Argentina, but quickly grew
in popularity due to its primary consumer use case, said Garcia, adding:
“It
was just an experiment, it was something we built in a week or
something, and we got a really warm welcome from the bitcoin community
in Argentina and they started trusting us with their coins.”
Today,
enBitcoins operates with the help of three partners that conduct free
bill payment services, and doesn’t see earnings from the offering.
In
the future, Garcia says enBitcoins may look to ink deals directly with
major utility providers so they can earn as much as traditional bill
payment intermediaries. However, such plans are still in the early
stages.
Garcia indicates that enBitcoins is still a side project for the team, most of whom joined BitPay when it
opened a new headquarters in Argentina at the beginning of 2014.
TuKarCash, Indonesia
TuKarCash is an Indonesian payment gateway that allows money to be sent from a
number of different payment services including: Western Union, bank transfer, PerfectMoney, EgoPay, cash, and bitcoin.
Once the money is in the account, users can pay bills for utilities including telephone/Internet, water and electricity.
Bahtcoin, Thailand
Thailand-based buy-sell exchange
Bahtcoin is doing well for a country where bitcoin’s legal status was
once questioned.
Users can also use the site
to pay bills for landline and mobile phones, Internet service and cable TV, plus power from
Metropolitan Electricity,
by submitting billing information via an online form and receiving a
payment code. There’s even at least one language school on the list.
Image via Lisa S. / Shutterstock