El Salvador’s Bitcoin reserve currently stands at 7,696 BTC, holding an approximate value of $460 million as of late June. However, the financial implications of this reserve are becoming increasingly entangled with political narratives that may not align with the underlying economic realities. President Nayib Bukele’s administration continues to promote an ambitious strategy of accumulating one Bitcoin daily, despite the country being under a $1.4 billion Extended Fund Facility with the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which explicitly restricts public-sector Bitcoin purchases.
This disconnect between the government’s public messaging and the constraints imposed by the IMF is likely to be put under scrutiny in the next review by the Fund. At the time of this report, Bitcoin was trading in the range of $59,000 to $60,000, a decline of about 19% over the past month, which compounds the fiscal optics around El Salvador’s Bitcoin reserves. The valuation of the reserves peaked at nearly $800 million in early 2026, making the government’s bet on Bitcoin appear more promising than it does today.
Currently, the accumulated 7,696 BTC represents a substantial unrealized loss for the country, a fact that has caught the attention of the IMF. El Salvador’s foray into Bitcoin, which began in September 2021 with the legal recognition of the cryptocurrency, was initially celebrated as a landmark move in sovereign cryptocurrency adoption. The establishment of the state-run Chivo wallet aimed to bolster public acceptance of Bitcoin and branding the country’s BTC purchases as a national asset. However, these ambitions now confront limitations under the terms set by the IMF, which was necessary for stabilizing the nation’s public finances.
The IMF’s Extended Fund Facility, approved in early 2025, includes strict conditions regarding Bitcoin accumulation, explicitly stating a zero ceiling on voluntary public-sector BTC purchases. Additionally, similar restrictions apply to BTC-linked debt and tokenized instruments. These stipulations are not merely aspirational targets; they are binding requirements that, if unmet, could have serious consequences for funding disbursements.
Despite this zero accumulation commitment, El Salvador’s Bitcoin holdings have reportedly increased since the IMF program’s initiation. Official records indicated 5,968 BTC when the program began in December 2024, while the latest figures show 7,696 BTC as of late June 2026. The IMF clarifies that the increase in the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve Fund is not due to net new acquisitions but rather the consolidation of Bitcoin across various government wallets. This includes transfers from a cold-storage address managed by BANDESAL, rather than fresh purchases in the market. According to the IMF, the total amount of BTC under government control has remained static.
This explanation may hold up under international public-sector accounting standards, which allow for the aggregation of assets held in different government wallets. However, the distinction is not immediately apparent to the public, rendering the government’s one-BTC-a-day narrative ambiguous. The claim may alternatively refer to internal wallet movements instead of new sovereign acquisitions.
Bukele’s strategy for sovereign Bitcoin accumulation was always multifaceted. It served as a hedge against dollar reliance, aimed at enhancing El Salvador’s image within the international Bitcoin community, and functioned as a domestic political signal. Despite the pressure from the IMF, the one-BTC-a-day narrative continues to be a potent message on social media, reinforcing El Salvador’s position as a leader in the adoption of cryptocurrency through regulation rather than restriction.
However, the political and public accountability structures are changing. The IMF program mandates detailed reporting of all public-sector wallet addresses and their respective Bitcoin balances, with deadlines set for March, June, and December of 2025. There is also an obligation for the government to cease its public involvement with the Chivo wallet by July 2025 and to liquidate the Fidebitcoin trust, alongside submitting audited financial reports for all Bitcoin-related public entities. The Fund has indicated that ongoing efforts will be made to ensure that El Salvador refrains from accumulating additional Bitcoin, signaling heightened scrutiny rather than a simple compliance check.
Unlike corporate entities or ETF sponsors, El Salvador lacks an easy exit strategy for its reserves. The country’s Bitcoin holdings must align with specific budgetary targets, IMF disbursement conditions, and public accounting mandates, presenting a unique set of constraints not faced by private financial institutions.



