The 2026 Currency Reality for Argentina Travelers

If you've read any Argentina travel blog from 2020 through 2024, you've seen the advice:

"Bring stacks of USD cash. Exchange at the blue dollar rate (sometimes called 'dolar blue' or 'cueva' rate). You'll get 40-100% more pesos than using your foreign credit card."

That advice was correct and important from 2019 to mid-2024. It is obsolete in 2026. Following it now adds risk (carrying large cash amounts, visiting informal exchange houses) without adding meaningful value.

Lakes and mountains from Cerro Campanario — Bariloche at golden hour
Lakes and mountains from Cerro Campanario — Bariloche at golden hour

The rates have converged

As of early 2026:

RateApproximate ARS per USDGap vs official
Oficial (official)~1,450baseline
Blue dollar (informal)~1,480-1,500~2%
MEP (Mercado Electrónico de Pagos)~1,460~0.7%
Visa foreign card (after fees)~1,455-1,480~0-2%

Source: Wanderwallet — Argentina exchange rates, Buenos Aires Herald — Argentina dollar rates, Blue Dollar Net.

The 50-100% gap that made USD cash king is gone. The Milei administration's 2024-2025 currency reforms — including the dismantling of the cepo cambiario — unified the rates for practical purposes. Using your Visa at Argentine restaurants and ATMs now costs you roughly the same as exchanging cash at a cueva, without the hassle or the cash risk.

What this means for a Bariloche trip

Stop carrying $1,000+ in USD cash for a week's trekking trip. You don't need it.

What you actually need:
- $150-250 in USD cash for hut kiosks, taxis, and emergency reserves (still useful because refugios are cash-only and ATMs in town have withdrawal limits that make getting large peso amounts tedious)
- A Visa or Mastercard with no or low foreign transaction fees for restaurants, hotels, supermarkets, and advance refugio bookings
- A fintech card like Wise or Revolut if you want to minimize fees further (both work in Argentina, both settle in ARS at near-market rates)

Source: Himalayan Hero — insurance guide (for general Argentine ATM reality), cross-referenced with BA Herald.

Real 2026 cost table for a 7-day Bariloche trip

Based on summer 2024-2025 published tariffs (the most recent available at research time), adjusted for projected 2026 inflation:

Line itemARSUSD @ 1,450
Transport in
Flight BUE → BRC (one way, advance booking)~60,000-290,000$40-200
Return flightsame$40-200
OR bus BUE → BRC (20-22 hrs one way)~150,000~$100
Entry and registration
Nahuel Huapi park entry (day 1, non-resident)20,000$14
Park entry (day 2, 50% off)10,000$7
Registro de TrekkingFree$0
Refugio accommodation (3 nights on the traverse)
Refugio Frey — pernocte (bed only)30,000-40,000$21-28
Refugio Jakob — full board~65,000~$45
Refugio Italia (Laguna Negra) — full board75,000$52
Town accommodation (4 nights)
Hostel dorm, Bariloche center~25,000-45,000/night$17-31/night
Private room, mid-range~70,000-100,000/night$48-69/night
Food on trail (cash, ARS)
Dinner at Frey (a la carte)17,500$12
Breakfast at refugio~5,000$3
Snacks/drinks per day5,000-10,000$3-7
Food and transport in town
Average meal15,000-30,000$10-20
Taxi to Villa Catedral~15,000-25,000$10-17
Total estimated for 7 days (self-guided, budget-mid)~870,000-1,050,000~$600-720

Source: Refugio Frey — tariff PDF 2024, Rio Negro — refugios 2025/26, Nahuel Huapi — entry tariffs, Kayak BUE-BRC.

Important caveat: 2026-27 summer tariffs for refugios will be published by CAB around November 2026. Expect them to inflate from the numbers above by 40-80% in ARS terms but hold roughly steady in USD terms (this is how Argentine inflation and currency adjustment work together).

Comparison to the other Patagonia destinations

DestinationAverage daily cost (USD)Source
Bariloche~$60/dayThis article's calculation
El Chalten, Argentina$68/dayBudget Your Trip
Torres del Paine, Chile$106/dayBudget Your Trip

Cost-adjusted, Bariloche is the best value in Patagonia trekking. It's 10-15% cheaper than El Chalten and nearly 45% cheaper than Torres del Paine, for a product that delivers comparable alpine scenery and arguably better hut infrastructure.

The irony

The travel-blog advice to "bring USD cash" was written for a specific economic regime — the cepo-era multi-rate system — and the advice has survived in guidebooks and Medium posts for two years after the conditions that justified it disappeared. If you're reading a 2023 blog post telling you to exchange at the blue dollar, that post is telling you to solve a problem that no longer exists.

This is a special case of a broader principle: any travel advice more than 18 months old about Argentina needs a 2026 footnote. The country's economic regime shifts faster than travel publishing can keep up.

The bottom line

The Argentine currency adventure is over. Trek like a normal tourist.


Sources