Argentina · Money
Key Facts
A new high. The wholesale dollar reached about 1,471 pesos on June 23, its strongest level since early January.
The pace. The official rate is up roughly 4.5% in June, the first month in 2026 it has outrun expected inflation.
The spread. Parallel and financial rates sit higher — the “blue” around 1,505 — as Argentina still runs several exchange rates.
The paradox. It climbed even as Argentina posted a record May trade surplus, on a stronger global dollar and slower central-bank buying.
For you. More pesos per dollar helps foreign earners, but many Buenos Aires rents are quoted in dollars; confirm the rate and segment before acting.
*Argentina's wholesale dollar hit roughly 1,471 pesos on June 23—its strongest since early January—rising about 4.5% in June, the first month in 2026 the official rate has outpaced expected inflation, even as May posted a record trade surplus.*
For anyone living in Buenos Aires on income from abroad, the exchange board just tilted your way. Argentina’s wholesale dollar climbed to about 1,471 pesos on June 23, its highest since early January, and the parallel “blue” dollar is back near 1,505.
What moved
On June 23 the wholesale rate rose about 0.7% to around 1,471 pesos, its strongest close since January 2. Retail and parallel rates followed, with Banco Nación near 1,490 and the informal “blue” about 1,505.
The official rate is now up roughly 4.5% over June. That makes this the first month in 2026 in which the dollar has risen faster than expected inflation, narrowing the gap that had quietly eaten into foreign budgets all year.
Why it rose
The move came despite a record May trade surplus of about US$3.5 billion, which would normally support the peso. Analysts point instead to a stronger global dollar and a deliberate central-bank decision to slow its own purchases.
Country risk, meanwhile, fell to around 421 basis points, near an eight-year low, helped by a World Bank guarantee package. In other words, the peso is sliding for technical reasons, not because markets have turned on Argentina.
What a stronger dollar means for your budget
If you earn in dollars or euros, the immediate effect is welcome: each dollar now buys more pesos for everyday spending. Groceries, transport, restaurants and peso-priced services all get a little cheaper in real terms.
The lift is modest rather than dramatic, because the peso is still around 16% stronger in real terms than it was in January. Buenos Aires is no longer the bargain it was two years ago, but June nudged the maths back toward newcomers.
The catch: dollar-priced rents
The big exception is housing. Furnished rentals aimed at foreigners in Palermo, Recoleta and Belgrano are very often quoted directly in dollars, so a rising dollar does nothing to lower them.
That splits your budget in two: peso costs ease while your largest fixed expense holds firm. Negotiating rent in pesos, where a landlord will allow it, is the main way to capture the currency move.
The two-speed economy you land in
It is worth remembering whose side of the economy benefits. A recent university study found Argentina’s minimum wage has lost close to 40% of its purchasing power since late 2023, a squeeze that falls on locals, not dollar earners.
For expats that means a city of visible contrasts: affordable nights out alongside real local hardship. Tipping well and paying fairly is not just courtesy here; it is the decent response to a lopsided recovery.
How to handle the rates
Argentina runs several exchange rates at once, so the number that matters depends on how you bring money in. Cash travellers often use the blue, while residents commonly move funds through the MEP or “contado con liqui” routes via a local broker.
Whichever you use, date your figures and check them the same day, because the rates move quickly and the gaps between them shift. None of this is financial advice, and the segment you choose has tax and legal implications worth confirming locally.
Frequently Asked Questions
How high is the dollar in Argentina right now?
On June 23 the wholesale rate reached about 1,471 pesos, with the informal “blue” near 1,505. Those were multi-month highs, up roughly 4.5% on the official rate over June.
Why is the peso weakening?
Mainly a stronger global dollar and a central bank slowing its purchases, rather than a loss of confidence. It happened despite a record May trade surplus and falling country risk.
Is a stronger dollar good for expats?
Generally yes if you earn abroad, since each dollar buys more pesos for peso-priced costs. The exception is housing, as many rentals for foreigners are quoted in dollars.
Which exchange rate should I use?
Argentina has several — official, blue, MEP and CCL. Cash visitors often use the blue, while residents tend to move money through MEP or CCL via a broker; confirm the current rules first.
Is this financial advice?
No. Rates move fast and the figures here are dated to June 23, so confirm live numbers and any tax or legal implications before you transact.
View original source — Rio Times ↗


