Bolivia’s central bank plans to reopen USD accounts, return $933 million in frozen deposits
The move comes after Bolivia abandoned its decades-old dollar peg, as citizens increasingly turned to stablecoins like USDT and USDC to weather a deepening economic crisis.
Bolivia’s central bank just told its citizens: we’re giving your dollars back. After years of restricted access to foreign currency deposits, the Banco Central de Bolivia announced a phased program to return approximately $933 million in frozen USD holdings to individuals, starting July 15, 2026.
The plan prioritizes smaller accounts first, with deposits under $1,000 getting guaranteed access before larger balances between $1,001 and $3,000. BCB President David Iván Espinoza said the bank has sufficient dollar reserves to cover these commitments over the next two years.
From fixed peg to free float
Bolivia maintained a fixed exchange rate of roughly 6.96 bolivianos per dollar for well over a decade. Dollar reserves started draining in 2023. The government couldn’t maintain the fiction of a fixed rate while running short on actual dollars, so it did what governments in this situation eventually always do: it restricted access. Bolivians with USD deposits in the banking system found themselves unable to withdraw their own money.
On June 26, 2026, Bolivia officially pulled the plug on the peg. The boliviano now floats against the dollar under BCB management, with the reference rate settling around 9.73 to 9.83 BOB/USD. In English: the boliviano lost roughly 40% of its value against the dollar compared to the old fixed rate.
Inflation tells the rest of the story. Bolivia went from approximately 2% inflation in 2023 to over 20% in 2025.
Stablecoins filled the vacuum
Bolivians turned to stablecoins, specifically USDT and USDC, as a workaround for the dollar shortage. The BCB recognized this trend rather than fighting it. In mid-2024, Bolivia’s central bank authorized regulated digital asset services, effectively giving legal cover to what was already happening on the ground.
What this means for crypto markets and investors
The flexible exchange rate regime introduces new volatility that could sustain stablecoin demand. Under the old peg, the boliviano’s value was predictable if unrealistic. Now, Bolivians face genuine currency risk for the first time in years.
The phased deposit return also bears watching as a confidence signal. If the BCB delivers dollars on schedule starting July 15, it rebuilds trust in the traditional banking system. The $933 million commitment is substantial for an economy Bolivia’s size, and the two-year timeline gives plenty of room for things to go sideways.
Traders monitoring Latin American forex markets should note the new BOB/USD range around 9.73 to 9.83. Any significant deviation from that band, particularly further weakening, would likely correlate with increased on-chain stablecoin volume originating from Bolivian wallets.