How Big Is Venezuela’s Crypto Market?

Venezuela:- The recent arrest of Venezuela’s president Maduro has once again pushed the country into global headlines. Venezuela has long been known for holding the world’s largest proven oil reserves but the story doesn’t end there.

The fallout is shining an even brighter light on a trend that’s been quietly accelerating for years – Venezuela’s rapid embrace of crypto. This has been driven by hyperinflation, broken banking rails and the search for reliable dollar alternatives.

Infact, what has quietly come to light after Maduro arrest news is how a significant part of this oil trade is now being conducted. Reports suggest that a majority of Venezuela’s oil-related transactions are increasingly being settled in stablecoins, making us think about how good of a crypto market Venezuela is?

This story explains the answers to it.

Oil Trading in Stablecoins

Chainalysis data shared with this report shows Venezuela leading LATAM in year-over-year growth in crypto value received – roughly a 100–120% increase. This puts it well ahead of regional peers.

At the same time, on-chain activity and on-the-ground use cases suggest Venezuelans are increasingly relying on stablecoins – USDT and USDC. The use cases does not only end day-to-day commerce, payroll and cross-border transfers. That shift matters not just for pockets and remittances but for how a resource-rich, oil-dependent economy could re-enter global trade.

In a much  bigger use case, stablecoins are increasingly being used as a settlement layer for oil exports. That matters because Venezuela sits on the world’s largest proven crude reserves – 303 billion barrels.

A handful of analysts arugue that, as long as dollar settlement via traditional channels remains difficult, oil buyers and sellers are increasingly leaning on stablecoins to move value. According to an analyst, around 80 % of Venezuela’s crude oil payments are settled in USDT.

Venezuela Crypto Market
Source: Linkedin Post

Also Read: Inside the Exponential Rise of Stablecoin-as-a-Service Business

Venezuela’s $60 billion “shadow reserve” Claim

Perhaps the most explosive claim to surface recently is an analyst estimate that Venezuela has amassed a “shadow reserve” of Bitcoin and USDT worth roughly $56–$67 billion. This is implying something on the order of 600k+ BTC.

The number has been traced by accumulation to earlier gold-for-Bitcoin swaps, oil export settlements in USDT, and the conversion of stablecoins into BTC. But the freezing risks by Trump after Maduro capture remains.

Image
Source: X Post

How big is the Venezuelan crypto market?

As clear, stablecoins – from USDT to USDC – aren’t niche here. They’ve become everyday money for commerce, payroll, remittances and cross-border transfers. According to HTX report, about 9% of Venezuela’s $5.4B in remittances – roughly $461M – moved on-chain in 2023.

Monthly P2P volume reportedly exceeds $100M. This roughly implies that 10% of the population now uses crypto as a regular payment method in daily life.

That makes sense when the bolívar has lost more than 70% of its value: dollar-pegged tokens act as both medium of exchange and safe store of value.

On a per-capita basis the picture is even clearer. When adjust for population, Venezuela ranks as high as 9th globally in Chainalysis’s 2025 adoption index.

Interestinly, Binance’s P2P marketplace is widely used in Venezuela to convert bolívars into stablecoins and crypto. While it remains a major on-ramp/off-ramp channel, other crypto platforms could be eyeing the region in near future.

Also Read: The Coming Institutional Crypto Hiring Wave

What it means for crypto businesses?

Venezuela is an emerging crypto market with advanced grassroots adoption. It is not yet a fully developed crypto economy like the U.S. or Western Europe, but it behaves like one in critical respects.

Thus, for crypto businesses, this creates a rare opportunity. It is a  market where product market fit already exists for payments, payroll, remittances and settlement. However, expansion must be approached with caution. Regulatory ambiguity, sanctions exposure and political risk mean will  likely impact the product success.

Also Read: SharpLink Names Joseph Chalom Sole CEO

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