Venezuelans are paying 16% more for USDT on Binance as bolivar printing outpaces dollar supply.
The cost of buying Tether on Binance's peer-to-peer market in Venezuela jumped about 16 percent over the past 30 days, climbing from 690 bolivars per USDT to briefly above 810, as a surge in local currency liquidity outstripped official dollar access.
"What's happening today is a typical déjà vu of Chavismo, the parallel rate skyrocketing to 810 Bs with no brakes, the monetary liquidity out of control at 2.11 trillion bolivars," Hever Castro, an analyst tracking Venezuelan markets, said. "The BCV's intervention was a joke, many couldn't buy and ended up on Binance."
Venezuela's monetary liquidity surpassed 2.11 trillion bolivars ($3.58 billion) by late May, according to central bank data, with the measure expanding about 69 percent in the first quarter alone. Since January, the money supply has more than doubled. Commercial banks have imposed stricter limits on foreign-exchange purchases and reduced physical dollar supply, pushing households and businesses to peer-to-peer platforms. The USDT rate on Binance briefly cleared 810 bolivars before easing to about 794, according to tracker data.
The widening gap between official and market rates erodes confidence in the bolivar as a medium of exchange and raises the cost of imports for businesses that rely on stablecoins to preserve working capital. With the central bank continuing to expand the money supply to fund public spending, the premium is unlikely to close unless dollar access through formal channels improves — a scenario that appears distant as bank quotas remain exhausted.
Merchants in Caracas markets such as La Hoyada, El Cementerio, and Catia already use the USDT rate to restock inventory, with some quoting up to 1,200 bolivars per dollar, Castro said. The token has served as a de facto dollar in Venezuela for years amid chronic inflation, and its role is deepening as the bolivar's purchasing power erodes.
Globally, USDT trades near $1 with a market cap above $186 billion, ranking it third among all crypto assets, according to CoinGecko. The stablecoin's supply has grown steadily, reinforcing its function as a dollar proxy in economies where access to physical dollars is restricted. Venezuela is one of several high-inflation countries — alongside Argentina, Lebanon, and Turkey — where residents have turned to stablecoins as a practical store of value that can be held on a smartphone without requiring bank approval.
The dynamic mirrors patterns seen in other broken monetary systems, but Venezuela's pace remains extreme. While the central bank prints bolivars to fund spending, it simultaneously restricts access to foreign currency, creating a bottleneck that pushes demand onto P2P platforms. Binance's escrow-based model has turned the exchange into one of the country's most important financial conduits, even as it operates in a regulatory gray zone.
Venezuelan authorities have historically attempted to restrict dollarization, sometimes by targeting foreign-exchange brokers and unofficial exchange houses. A sudden clampdown on crypto on-ramps or restrictions on Binance access could sever the arbitrage that keeps the premium in check. For now, the premium itself acts as a self-adjusting mechanism: if it climbs too far above the black-market dollar rate, locals with access to physical dollars are incentivized to sell into Tether, which could bring the price lower.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.