In front of an enthusiastic Miami crowd five years ago, Nayib Bukele made an announcement that most finance ministers would have dismissed as science fiction. El Salvador, a tiny country in Central America with roughly six million citizens that is still plagued by gang violence and debt, planned to legalize Bitcoin. Not as a test. not as a test project. as a law. The first in the world. He referred to it as the start of a revolution in finance. And for a split second, it seemed as though he might be correct in spite of all the plausible doubts.
Adopting Bitcoin would propel El Salvador into a techno-libertarian paradise, banking the unbanked, drawing in international innovators, and funding futuristic projects like a well-known digital wallet, smart cities, and so-called Volcano bonds, according to Bukele’s utopian vision of the future.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Full Name | Nayib Armando Bukele Ortez |
| Born | July 24, 1981, San Salvador, El Salvador |
| Title | President of El Salvador (2019 – present) |
| Party | Nuevas Ideas (New Ideas) |
| Bitcoin Law Enacted | September 7, 2021 |
| BTC Holdings (2026) | ~7,500 BTC (approx. $500–600 million) |
| IMF Loan Secured | $1.4 billion (Extended Fund Facility, Feb. 2025) |
| Bitcoin Legal Tender Status | Revoked under IMF agreement (early 2025) |
| Domestic Approval Rating | ~91.9% (early 2026) |
| Reference | imf.org — El Salvador EFF Arrangement (December 2024) |
The story was captivating, and the man telling it was captivating. Bukele had a talent for branding and optics, making a financially struggling nation seem like the epicenter of the most fascinating experiment in history. But after five years, it is painfully evident that good economic policy and captivating narratives are not always the same thing.
A loan agreement, rather than a cryptocurrency price chart, provided the clearest indication of the current situation. El Salvador was able to obtain a $1.4 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund in December 2024, which included the removal of the requirement for businesses to accept Bitcoin and the prohibition against using the cryptocurrency to pay taxes. The government-run Chivo wallet, which was meant to represent Bukele’s digital economy, was discreetly shut down. El Salvador’s use of Bitcoin as legal tender was essentially over. That’s a pretty disappointing conclusion to the first chapter for a project that was marketed as revolutionary.
The value of El Salvador’s holdings was reduced by about $300 million by February 2026, when the price of Bitcoin had dropped by almost 50% from its peak the year before. Even as the most recent defeat eliminated hundreds of millions of dollars from the government’s holdings and complicated ongoing IMF negotiations, Bukele, a fervent supporter who made the token legal tender alongside the dollar, continued to purchase one Bitcoin every day.
A man doubling down on a wager that the scoreboard indicates he is losing because he is certain the scoreboard is inaccurate has an almost stubborn quality. He might be correct. Another possibility is that he simply isn’t ready to acknowledge it.
The fact that El Salvador’s Bitcoin experiment didn’t occur in a vacuum is what really complicates this story. The economy of the nation was already precarious. The main source of economic support for Salvadorans living overseas had long been remittances, and the gang problem had been eroding the nation for years.
Genuine stability was brought about by Bukele’s aggressive, constitutionally contentious, but unquestionably successful crackdown on crime. According to the IMF, El Salvador’s real GDP growth is expected to reach about 4% by 2026, which is “very good.” Increasing confidence and record tourism are real. Simply put, it’s difficult to attribute any of it to Bitcoin.
According to a Central American University survey, 88% of Salvadorans had never used Bitcoin in 2023. It’s a startling number. In order to encourage adoption, the government built kiosks, ran advertising campaigns, and gave away $30 worth of free Bitcoin to anyone who downloaded the Chivo app. Nevertheless, the majority of Salvadorans just didn’t care. It’s difficult to ignore the fact that the people the experiment was purportedly intended to assist—the unbanked, the impoverished in rural areas, and the workers sending remittances—were the ones who showed the least interest in taking part.
Nearly $550 million, or roughly 15% of its foreign exchange reserves, are held by the Salvadoran government in Bitcoin, a volatile asset whose price fluctuations directly contributed to the country’s debt crisis. For a nation that required an international bailout to stabilize its finances, that is an impressive position. Contrary to public claims made by Bukele and his Bitcoin Office that they were still stacking every day, a letter signed by two of El Salvador’s top finance officials verified that the nation had not purchased any new Bitcoin since February 2025. To put it mildly, there is a significant discrepancy between the official narrative and the financial reality.
El Salvador’s zero capital gains tax on Bitcoin, which the IMF decided not to alter and which still attracts foreign cryptocurrency investors and companies to the nation, is one feature that has survived the IMF deal unaltered. It is a real policy benefit that should not be disregarded. Businesses are moving. There is still interest. Even without the grand utopian narrative, there is a version of this story in which El Salvador develops into a lean, cryptocurrency-friendly jurisdiction for international capital. quieter than anticipated. More dull. but genuine.
What Bukele’s Bitcoin wager says about the nature of audacious economic experiments in general is the deeper question. Currency pegs, nationalization plans, and austerity measures are just a few of the big ideas that nations have gambled on in the past. History has not been kind to those who have confused ideology with strategy.
As the market declined in January 2026, Bukele declared he was purchasing both gold and Bitcoin, despite the fact that his government was concurrently negotiating the conditions of an IMF program that specifically prohibited such purchases. One gets the impression from watching this that the man would prefer to be intriguingly incorrect than dullly cautious.
And yet. His approval rating at home is close to 92%. By most accounts, Salvadorans still adore him. It’s safer on the streets. The economy is expanding. The Bitcoin chapter might end as a footnote: costly, somewhat awkward, but manageable. Or maybe the country ends up in a worse situation than it was before the IMF’s patience runs out.
The outcome of this is still genuinely uncertain. It’s evident that El Salvador’s Bitcoin wager was never truly about the cryptocurrency. It had to do with sovereignty, power, branding, and the aspiration of a small nation to be significant on a global scale. It was effective on that count, though only momentarily. El Salvador continues to struggle to determine whether the cost was worthwhile.

