Argentina did not adopt stablecoins because of cryptocurrency ideology. It adopted them because the peso kept failing.
Between 2019 and 2024, Argentina cycled through three exchange rate regimes, imposed and relaxed capital controls multiple times, saw annual inflation peak above 211% in 2023, and watched the peso lose more than 80% of its dollar value. USDT became what the peso could not be: a unit of account that held its value from month to month. Stablecoins now account for 61.8% of Argentine crypto transaction volume (Chainalysis, 2025) — a proportion well above any other major market. On Bitso, USDT and USDC together account for roughly 72% of all purchases.
The peso's decades-long credibility problem
To understand why Argentines hold USDT, it helps to understand what they are holding it instead of.
Argentina has experienced repeated currency crises. In 2001–2002, the government froze bank accounts in a measure known as the corralito, preventing Argentines from withdrawing their own dollar deposits. That single event — a government sequestration of savings — created a generation of Argentines for whom domestic bank deposits are not a reliable store of value. Holding dollars outside the formal banking system became normalized, culturally and practically.
Physical dollar hoarding became endemic. Argentine households are estimated to hold between $200–250 billion in physical US dollar bills — more dollar cash per capita than almost any country outside the United States. Stablecoins are the digital successor to that behavior: same function (preserve value in dollars), different form (phone wallet rather than a mattress or a safety deposit box in Montevideo).
Capital controls and the blue dollar
From 2019 through early 2025, Argentina's government imposed a series of capital controls that severely limited residents' legal access to foreign currency. At their strictest, the controls limited individual dollar purchases to $200 per month at the official rate through the banking system. Anyone who wanted more than that faced a choice:
- Buy at the parallel "blue dollar" (dólar blue) rate — which traded at premiums of 30% to over 100% above the official rate for much of this period
- Use crypto exchanges or P2P platforms to acquire USDT or USDC at rates pegged to, or near, the blue dollar market
Stablecoin exchanges became a formal-sector alternative to the informal parallel FX market. Because USDT tracks the dollar and most exchanges priced it in ARS at or near the blue dollar rate, buying USDT was functionally equivalent to buying dollars at the blue rate — but through a regulated platform with a smartphone interface.
This dynamic made Argentina one of the largest stablecoin markets in the world by volume relative to GDP. In the twelve months ending June 2024, Argentines transferred approximately $91.1 billion in crypto (Chainalysis) — slightly exceeding Brazil's $90.3 billion for the same period despite Argentina's economy being roughly a third the size of Brazil's.
Who uses stablecoins and how
The Argentine stablecoin market is not monolithic. Several distinct use cases have emerged:
Savings and wealth preservation. The most common use: holding USDT or USDC as a substitute for a dollar savings account. Surveys of crypto users consistently show that more than 75% of crypto-paid Argentine workers prefer to receive compensation in stablecoins rather than other digital assets (Bitwage, September 2025). Among tech workers specifically, only 2% receive salaries in pesos.
Freelancer and contractor payments. Argentina's technology sector — which exports software and services to the US and Europe — widely uses USDC and USDT for invoice settlement. Platforms like Deel, Bitwage, and Lemon Cash make this accessible to individual contractors. Deel chose Argentina as the launch market for its DLUSD stablecoin wallet in June 2026, citing the finding that 84.6% of Argentine contractors prefer USD over local currency for payment.
Remittances. Argentine workers abroad send money home; the high blue dollar premium historically made stablecoin remittances more attractive than official bank transfers.
Commerce. Some businesses price goods in USDT, particularly importers. A small number of Buenos Aires stores accept USDT or USDC directly through QR code apps.
2025: what changed
The Milei government's economic program — focused on fiscal consolidation and liberalization — included a significant easing of capital controls in April 2025. The official and blue dollar exchange rates converged substantially. Annual inflation, while still elevated at 43.5% by mid-2025, had fallen sharply from 2023's peak.
The immediate effect on stablecoin markets was notable but not transformative. Stablecoin trading volumes remained 2.5 times higher than the 2024 monthly average even after the convergence (Lemon Cash data). Argentina's CNV also issued Resolution 1058/2025 in March 2025, establishing a formal regulatory framework for virtual asset service providers — giving institutional and business users greater legal certainty.
The persistence of stablecoin demand even after formal dollar access eased points to a structural shift: Argentines who spent years managing their finances through stablecoins have found them useful enough to continue using at scale even when the original capital control incentive diminished. The behavior, in other words, has become normalized.
Argentina as a signal
Argentina illustrates that stablecoin adoption in high-inflation contexts is demand-driven and hard to suppress through regulation: the 2019–2024 capital control regime, among the strictest in Latin America, did not prevent the market from growing dramatically. What regulation can do — as the 2025 CNV framework attempts — is channel that activity through licensed, compliant providers. The patterns here — P2P peso-to-USDT markets, stablecoin-denominated freelance income, dollar-quoted commerce — give concrete form to the digital dollarization scenario the IMF has modeled as a systemic risk for fragile economies.
For the broader analysis, see the article on digital dollarization.