Stablecoin adoption in Venezuela is expected to accelerate as the country’s economic pressures deepen and the bolívar continues to lose value, according to a new report from blockchain intelligence firm TRM Labs.
Key Takeaways:
Venezuela’s worsening economy and a weakening bolívar are driving wider stablecoin adoption, TRM Labs says. Stablecoins are increasingly used for daily payments as trust in banks and regulation erodes. Peer-to-peer platforms and USDT now function as substitutes for retail banking across the country.The findings point to growing reliance on digital assets for everyday financial activity, particularly as confidence in traditional banking systems erodes.
Economic Strain and Sanctions Push Venezuelans Toward Stablecoins
Venezuelans have spent nearly a decade navigating hyperinflation, sanctions-related constraints, and limited access to reliable financial services.
Against this backdrop, TRM Labs said demand for stablecoins is likely to increase further if macroeconomic instability persists, a risk amplified by ongoing geopolitical tensions between the United States and Venezuela.
The firm noted that stablecoins are increasingly being used not only as a store of value, but also as a medium of exchange for routine transactions.
Regulatory uncertainty is also playing a role. Questions surrounding the authority and enforcement capacity of Venezuela’s crypto regulator, SUNACRIP, combined with lingering distrust in domestic banks, have left many citizens turning to blockchain-based alternatives.
“Absent a material shift in Venezuela’s macroeconomic conditions or the emergence of cohesive regulatory oversight, the role of digital assets — particularly stablecoins — is poised to expand,” TRM Labs said.
Data from the Chainalysis 2025 Crypto Adoption Index places Venezuela 18th globally for crypto adoption. When adjusted for population size, however, the country ranks ninth, underscoring how deeply embedded crypto usage has become among ordinary users.
Peer-to-peer (P2P) transactions have emerged as a critical financial tool. TRM Labs found that more than 38% of crypto-related site visits from Venezuelan IP addresses were directed to a single global platform offering P2P trading services.
These platforms, along with USDT-to-fiat conversions, have filled gaps left by unreliable domestic banking channels, even as users report intermittent service disruptions.
Local platforms are also gaining traction, particularly those offering mobile wallets and bank integrations tailored to Venezuelan users.
According to TRM Labs, these services enable informal settlement rails that support daily commerce despite infrastructure challenges.
The report frames Venezuela’s crypto ecosystem as a response to necessity rather than speculation.
Stablecoins, especially USDT, now underpin payroll payments, remittances, vendor transactions, and cross-border purchases.
Western Union to Launch Dollar-Backed Stablecoin on Solana
Western Union is also entering the stablecoin market with plans to launch the US Dollar Payment Token (USDPT) on the Solana blockchain in the first half of 2026.
The token, issued by Anchorage Digital Bank, will allow users to move money globally with lower fees and faster settlement times, reducing reliance on traditional banking intermediaries and volatile currency conversions.
Likewise, Visa has unveiled a new pilot that enables direct payouts in Circle’s USDC stablecoin for creators, freelancers, and gig workers worldwide.
The initiative aims to make cross-border payments nearly instant while reducing dependence on traditional banking infrastructure.
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