Crypto Credit Crisis Deepens As BlockFills Files For Bankruptcy
Alex Smith
5 hours ago
A Delaware court had already ordered 71 Bitcoin frozen over a customer fund dispute before crypto lender BlockFills formally declared it could no longer operate.
That freeze — tied to a legal battle with creditors over how client money was handled — cast a shadow over the company well before it filed for Chapter 11 protection this week.
Customers Locked Out As Withdrawals Halt
BlockFills stopped letting customers move their money last month. The company pointed to a sharp Bitcoin selloff — the coin dropped from above $97,000 to below $64,000 between mid-January and early February — as the reason it needed to protect both itself and its clients.
Deposits and withdrawals went dark. No timeline for restoration was given.
Now the company and three related entities, all operating under parent firm Reliz LTD, have taken their case to federal bankruptcy court in Delaware.
The filing seeks a Chapter 11 restructuring, which allows a company to keep running while it works out a repayment plan with the people it owes money to.
In a statement, BlockFills said the decision came after talks with investors, clients, and creditors. The company said it believes the court process will give it the time and structure needed to stabilize operations, find additional sources of cash, and look at possible deals with outside parties.
Officials said the goal is a consensual restructuring — meaning one that creditors agree to rather than one forced on them by a judge.
BlockFills, a cryptocurrency brokerage and trading platform, has filed for bankruptcy protection after months of market turmoil https://t.co/0NYGmW2e0o
— Bloomberg (@business) March 16, 2026
What Chapter 11 Means For Those Owed Money
Chapter 11 is not a wind-down. It is a legal system that provides a company with a moratorium to restructure its finances during which an automatic stay prevents creditors from collecting their debts.
As for customers who have balances on the platform, the situation is not so straightforward. They would be considered unsecured creditors in a bankruptcy case, which means they would be last in line after secured creditors and expenses approved by the court.
The amount they will get back and when that will happen is dependent on what assets BlockFills actually owns. That process can take months or, in complex cases, years.
Bankruptcy Filing Caps A Difficult Period For The FirmBlockFills has been under pressure from multiple directions. The frozen Bitcoin order involving Dominion Capital pointed to deeper disputes over whether customer funds were properly segregated — a question that goes beyond market timing.
Reports indicate the company had been in talks with stakeholders for an extended period before concluding that a court-supervised restructuring was the only viable path forward.
The collapse follows a pattern seen in earlier crypto lending failures. Companies including Celsius, Voyager, and BlockFi all suspended withdrawals before filing for bankruptcy during the 2022 market downturn. In each case, customers waited — sometimes years — for partial repayment.
BlockFills has not disclosed total liabilities, the number of affected customers, or the full value of assets under its control. This is a developing situation, and more details are expected to emerge as court documents become public.
Featured image from Unsplash, chart from TradingView
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