Can Salaries Be Referenced in Foreign Currency in Argentina?
Modified on: Thu, 4 Dec, 2025 at 6:07 PM
TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Setting a Salary Reference in USD or CAD
- Including Dual Currency in Contracts
- Exchange Rate Conversion Rules
- Legal Restrictions
- Automatic Salary Adjustments Based on Exchange Rate
- Employer Costs and Implications
- Recommendations and Best Practices
It is common practice in Argentina to reference salaries in USD or CAD. Here’s what the law allows and best practices for compliance.
Setting a Salary Reference in USD or CAD
Employers may reference salaries in a foreign currency (e.g., USD or CAD), but:
- Payment must always be made in Argentine pesos (ARS), as required by the Labor Contract Law.
- A foreign currency can be used as a calculation benchmark, provided that:
- The actual payment is in ARS.
- The ARS amount is calculated using:
- The exchange rate agreed in the contract, or
- If not specified, the official Banco Nación (BNA) rate.
This practice is common for highly qualified roles or international employment arrangements.
Including Dual Currency in Contracts
Contracts can include:
- A reference amount in USD/CAD.
- Its ARS equivalent based on the agreed exchange rate.
The contract must specify:
- Which exchange rate applies (e.g., BNA seller rate).
- When the rate will be determined (month-end, business day prior to payment, etc.).
Exchange Rate Conversion Rules
- Payment must always be in ARS.
- The exchange rate can be freely agreed between the parties, as long as it is documented.
- If no rate is specified, the Civil and Commercial Code applies, requiring the official BNA rate.
- There is no legal obligation to use a specific rate, provided it is clearly documented.
Legal Restrictions
- Payment in foreign currency is prohibited for employment relationships within Argentina.
- Referencing salaries in foreign currency is allowed.
- What is not allowed: agreeing to mandatory or regular payment in foreign currency.
- Employers must always pay in ARS.
Automatic Salary Adjustments Based on Exchange Rate
This is legal and common practice.
- If the salary is referenced to a foreign currency, the contract may include an automatic monthly adjustment clause based on the selected exchange rate (e.g., BNA seller rate).
- This is not considered a unilateral modification, as it is an objective formula agreed by both parties.
- The mechanism must be clearly documented in the contract.
Employer Costs and Implications
All employer costs are calculated in ARS, regardless of the reference currency. This includes:
- Social security contributions (approx. 26%–28% for SMEs).
- Union contributions (17%, if applicable).
- Occupational risk insurance (ART).
- Income tax withheld from the employee.
Key implication:
If the salary is tied to USD/CAD, exchange rate fluctuations will directly increase employer costs, even if local inflation does not reflect the same movement.
Recommendations and Best Practices
- Clearly define the applicable exchange rate (e.g., BNA seller rate).
- Specify the conversion date (month-end, business day before payment, etc.).
- Include a clause allowing salary structure reviews in case of regulatory changes by the Central Bank (BCRA).
- Consider that referencing a foreign currency increases exposure to macroeconomic fluctuations.
- Remember: exchange rates can rise or fall, they do not always move in one direction.
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