Key takeaways:
As inflation reaches 229%, daily prices in Venezuela are established in USDT “Binance dollars,” typically at current P2P rates.
There are three types of dollar rates (official, parallel, and P2P), but businesses mainly adhere to the P2P rate.
The government permits dollar-backed cryptocurrencies in exchanges, even though dollarization has not been legalized.
Venezuela has become a global hub for crypto: Stablecoins are prevalent for small transfers, primarily using TRC-20 USDT.
In Caracas, receipts frequently display totals in “Binance dollars” as pricing shifts from the Venezuelan bolívar to the blockchain.
As of May 2025, with an annual inflation rate around 229%, daily prices align with three references: the exchange rate from Venezuela’s central bank (BCV), the parallel “dólar negro,” and a Tether USDt (USDT) peer-to-peer (P2P) rate utilized by many merchants.
Disparities among these rates persist due to capital controls, separate liquidity pools, and irregular interventions.
To avoid constant revaluation in bolívars, merchants now quote, settle, or reconcile in USDT, effectively a form of dollarization based on stablecoins rather than cash.
What are “Binance dollars?”
In local terms, “dólares Binance” refers to USDT that is priced and settled on P2P markets (most prominently, Binance P2P).
For shops, freelancers, and building managers, this P2P rate serves as both the reference price for the day and the payment framework.
While other applications and OTC desks exist, a strong USDT liquidity keeps this benchmark at the forefront.
Transfers typically occur on Tron (TRC-20): fees are minimal, wallets are easily accessible, and digital dollars are more readily available than scarce paper USD (especially for frequent, smaller payments).
How USDT “replaced” cash in Venezuela
Three factors pushed Venezuela’s dollars onto the blockchain.
Firstly, inflation surged in May 2025 to about 26% month-on-month, keeping the annual inflation rate above 200%. Pricing in bolívars became impractical as menus and invoices required constant updates.
Secondly, the bolívar’s decline widened the discrepancy between official and street pricing. Over recent months, the currency lost about 30% in value at times and approximately 69% year-over-year (from July 2024 to July 2025), prompting merchants to seek a more stable unit of account.
Finally, physical US dollars are in short supply, a byproduct of sanctions and limited oil revenue. Digital dollars (particularly USDT) have become easier to source, store, and circulate through low-fee networks and widely used wallets.
Policies have also shifted in favor. Although quoting the parallel rate is still penalized, authorities have gradually allowed dollar-pegged cryptocurrencies in private-sector exchanges to keep markets operational, reflecting a tacit tolerance shy of formal dollarization.
Adoption trends complement this narrative. Venezuela is among the leaders in grassroots crypto usage, with stablecoins capturing a growing share of daily transactions.
In 2024, on-chain activity roughly doubled year-over-year, and stablecoins accounted for about 47% of transactions below $10,000, showing that USDT now underpins pricing and settlement for households and SMEs.
Did you know? Since 2008, Venezuela has removed 14 zeros from its currency through three redenominations (2008, 2018, 2021).
How a USDT payment actually works in Venezuela
At the register, prices are displayed in USD but settled in USDT based on that day’s local P2P quote, most commonly the Binance P2P rate, which Venezuelans check on their phones.
The cashier (or condo treasurer) updates that quote to show the total, and you scan a QR code containing the merchant’s Tron (TRC-20) address. Confirmation arrives within seconds; typical network fees are minimal, although you will need a small TRX (TRX) balance for fees.
Merchants can then choose to hold USDT as working capital, convert some to bolívars through an OTC/P2P desk for salaries and utilities, or pass USDT upstream to suppliers.
In practice, the P2P rate serves as the working benchmark since it reflects active order books and allows for immediate execution. Consequently, apartment complexes, small businesses, and freelancers reconcile against it rather than the central bank’s rate or informal quotes.
This process (USD listing, P2P conversion, TRC-20 transfer) now supports everyday transactions in the nation.
Who uses it and for what
Households utilize USDT for groceries, condo fees, rent adjustments, and peer-to-peer reimbursements to avoid price fluctuations in VES (Venezuelan bolívar).
Small and medium enterprises replenish imports priced in dollars, maintain management accounts in USD for transparency, and convert selectively to VES for payroll, utilities, and taxes.
Retail and service employers sometimes pay bonuses or parts of salaries in USDT to retain employees and safeguard purchasing power, while larger organizations tied to public procurement still align formal accounting with the BCV reference, even if daily operations rely on P2P pricing.
For numerous participants, the appeal lies in practicality: with a phone and a basic wallet, they can hold, receive, and send digital dollars without the hassle of searching for limited cash.
Did you know? Venezuela’s diaspora totals 7.7 million-7.9 million individuals (one of the largest international displacements), significantly boosting crypto remittances back home.
Frictions, risks and how people mitigate them
However, this shift comes with challenges.
Rate risk and reconciliation: Quotes associated with live P2P books can fluctuate intraday; even a brief delay can result in a payment being short or excessive if VES changes. Common mitigation strategies include timestamped invoices, short payment deadlines, “Pay Now” buttons that refresh quotes, and settling/reconciling immediately at day’s end.
Custody and device security: Theft of phones and loss of seed phrases present genuine operational risks. Users counter these with PIN/biometric locks, wallet passcode timeouts, offline recovery phrase backups, and (above a certain threshold) transferring balances to hardware wallets or account-abstraction wallets with social recovery.
Platform dependence and blacklisting: USDT is centrally issued and can be frozen under certain conditions. To mitigate exposure, merchants maintain modest operating balances, diversify funds across multiple wallets, avoid risky approvals, and utilize straightforward off-ramps.
OTC/P2P fraud: Off-platform transactions and fake payment screenshots still occur. The standard practice is to use on-platform escrow, trade only with high-reputation counterparties, wait for on-chain confirmation, and require verifiable proof-of-payment before releasing goods.
Policy gray zone: Authorities have penalized quoting the parallel rate while slowly permitting USDT in private-sector exchanges. Operators defend themselves by avoiding explicit parallel-rate references on invoices, maintaining clean records, separating pricing from accounting currency as needed, and monitoring regulatory changes closely.
Did you know? In August 2024, access to Binance was intermittently blocked by state-owned ISP CANTV during post-election turmoil, underscoring platform-dependence risks for P2P users.
Digital dollars take hold
Venezuela is experiencing de facto dollarization via crypto.
Unlike the 2019-2022 phase, when cash dollars informally dominated storefronts, the current unit of account and much of the liquidity for settlementnow comes from stablecoins (mainly USDT) without any changes to legal tender regulations.
The logic extends regionally: In high-inflation countries like Argentina, stablecoins serve as anchors for everyday transactions, remittances, and working capital, providing dollar pricing with hassle-free transfer across common wallets and P2P markets.
Policymakers are making incremental adjustments; Venezuela allows dollar-linked cryptocurrencies in private-sector exchanges to facilitate commerce, but this remains a practical workaround rather than a formal declaration of dollarization.
On a broader scale, dollar-backed stablecoins expand the dollar’s influence within daily payments and small-value transfers, which is why, in times of local currency instability and scarce cash, digital dollars emerge as the easiest option for households and SMEs.
This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.
