KEY POINTS
  • I traveled to Argentina for two weeks in February. While in Buenos Aires, the capital, I learned of a system of multiple exchange rates for Argentine pesos.
  • The "blue dollar" exchange rate set by the black market will extend U.S. tourists' money twice as far as the officially quoted rate. You can legally access that rate by wiring yourself money.
  • The government introduced a preferential tourist rate — Dólar MEP — for some credit card transactions in November. But there are reasons to stick to cash when possible.

In this article

The author in Argentinian Patagonia in February 2023. Here, the Spegazzini Glacier cascades into Lago Argentino, the third largest lake in South America.

Waiting in an hourlong line at a Western Union wasn't on my initial itinerary when planning a recent trip to Argentina.

Yet there I was, in the bowels of a shop on Calle Florida in downtown Buenos Aires, sweating in the 95-degree heat along with local Argentines and other tourists, patiently waiting to pick up cash I had forwarded to myself from the U.S.

In this article