Only 11% of El Salvador’s registered Bitcoin firms operational
April 15 2025 - 6:18AM
Cointelegraph


Only 20 of the 181 Bitcoin service providers registered with El
Salvador’s central bank are operational, with the rest failing to
meet the country’s requirements under its Bitcoin Law.
Local media outlet El Mundo cited data
from the Central Reserve Bank of El Salvador, showing that 11% of
the service providers are operational. According to the central
bank’s database, the rest of the providers are classified as
non-operational.
The data showed that at least 22 non-operational providers have
failed to meet most of the country’s Bitcoin Law
requirements, which mandate that providers implement stringent
supervision of their financial systems.
Most of El Salvador’s Bitcoin service providers are
non-operational
El Salvador’s Bitcoin Law requires providers to maintain an
Anti-Money Laundering (AML) program, keep records that accurately
reflect the company’s assets, liabilities and equity and have a
tailored cybersecurity program depending on the nature of its
services.
The data showed that 89% of the registered providers have failed
to meet some of these obligations to be classified as
operational.
Still, a few firms have satisfied the legal criteria, including
the state-backed Chivo Wallet and companies including Crypto
Trading & Investment and Fintech Américas.
Related: Cathie Wood to kick off El Salvador’s AI public
education program
El Salvador’s Bitcoin experiment
In 2021, El Salvador became the first country to
accept Bitcoin as
legal tender along with the US dollar. This move made Bitcoin
integral to El Salvador President Nayib Bukele’s economic
strategy.
However, the Central American country recently
signed a deal
with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) on a $1.4 billion loan
in exchange for rolling back some of its Bitcoin-related efforts.
Under the agreement, taxes will be paid in US dollars and public
institutions will limit their use of Bitcoin.
On March 3, the IMF asked the country to
stop its public
sector Bitcoin buys. Still, Bukele said the government will
continue to
purchase Bitcoin, seemingly contradicting its IMF deal.
The IMF deal prompted speculation about whether the country
would rescind
Bitcoin’s status as legal tender. John Dennehy, an El
Salvador-based Bitcoin activist and educator, said in an X Space
with Cointelegraph that a rollback law changing Bitcoin’s legal
status is set to take effect on April 30.
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