TL;DR: The dólar MEP (also called dólar bolsa) is a legal, market-based way to convert between pesos and US dollars by buying a bond in one currency and selling it in the other through the local capital market. It is one of the legitimate "financial dollar" routes foreigners use to move money for a property purchase. Argentine property is paid in physical US dollars at closing, and the MEP is one of the compliant rails that gets you there.
MEP stands for Mercado Electrónico de Pagos. The dólar MEP is an exchange rate, and a mechanism: you buy a dual-currency bond with pesos, then sell that same bond for dollars (or the reverse), through a licensed broker on the local market. The effective exchange rate you get is the "MEP rate." It is legal and widely used, distinct from the informal "blue" street dollar.
Buenos Aires property is priced and paid in physical US dollars at closing. A foreign buyer needs a compliant way to get dollars into the transaction and, on exit, proceeds back out. The MEP and the related CCL (contado con liquidación) are the legitimate financial-dollar routes for this, alongside the official channel.
| Route | What it is |
|---|---|
| Official (MULC) | The regulated official exchange channel |
| Dólar MEP (bolsa) | Bond-based conversion settled locally |
| CCL (contado con liqui) | Bond-based conversion settling abroad |
The deeper comparison of these routes is in our note on moving money into Argentina.
For years a wide gap between the official and financial dollars made the choice of route a major cost decision. Through 2024 and 2025 that gap compressed sharply, making these conversions cleaner and less penalizing than during the gap years. The routes still exist and still matter, but the stakes of choosing among them have eased.
The dólar MEP (or dólar bolsa) is a legal exchange route that converts pesos and dollars by buying a bond in one currency and selling it in the other through the local capital market.
Yes. The dólar MEP is a legal, market-based mechanism settled through licensed brokers, distinct from the informal "blue" street-dollar market.
Yes. The MEP is one of the legitimate financial-dollar routes foreigners use to bring funds in for a property purchase, which is settled in physical US dollars at closing.
Both convert via bonds. The dólar MEP settles the dollars locally inside Argentina, while CCL (contado con liquidación) settles them in an account abroad.
Choosing the right route is part of structuring the deal, not an afterthought. To plan how your funds reach the closing table, book a call.
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