For most Brazilians using crypto, the question isn't which coin to speculate on — it's which stablecoin to hold. USDT, USDC, and other dollar-pegged tokens all do the same thing at a glance. But the differences matter, especially in Brazil.
The Three Main Stablecoins in Brazil
USDT (Tether)
Market cap: $110B+ | Issuer: Tether Limited
The most liquid stablecoin globally. In Brazil, USDT has the deepest P2P markets — more BRL/USDT sellers on Bitget and Bybit than any other stablecoin. If you need to quickly convert BRL to a dollar-pegged asset or back, USDT is the fastest option.
Brazil-specific note: USDT TRC20 (Tron network) transfers cost under $1. This is what most Brazilians use for P2P and transfers.
USDC (USD Coin)
Market cap: $40B+ | Issuer: Circle
Backed by regulated US financial institutions. USDC is considered more transparent than USDT — Circle publishes monthly audits of reserves. For Brazilians who prefer regulatory clarity, USDC is attractive.
Brazil-specific note: USDC has less P2P liquidity in BRL than USDT. You might wait longer to find a trade or pay a slightly wider spread.
BRLA (Brazilian Digital BRL)
Issuer: BRLA Digital
A newer option — a stablecoin pegged to the Brazilian real rather than the dollar. Interesting for Brazilians who want to hold BRL-value without traditional banking system risk. Still gaining adoption; liquidity is thin.
Which to Choose?
| Use Case | Recommended |
|---|---|
| P2P trading in Brazil | USDT (deepest liquidity) |
| Maximum regulatory trust | USDC |
| Remittances to LATAM | USDT TRC20 |
| Earning yield | USDT or USDC (both available on major platforms) |
| Daily transactions | USDT (wider acceptance) |
Yield Opportunities in 2026
Both Bitget and Bybit offer yield on stablecoins:
- USDT Earn on Bybit: 5-12% APY (flexible or locked)
- USDT Savings on Bitget: 4-8% APY
For Brazilians, earning 8% APY in dollar-denominated terms compares favorably to the Selic rate (Brazil's benchmark rate) adjusted for BRL depreciation risk.
The Custodial Risk Question
Holding stablecoins on an exchange means the exchange holds your coins. If the exchange fails (like FTX did in 2022), you could lose access.
For amounts over R$ 10,000 equivalent, consider moving stablecoins to a non-custodial wallet (MetaMask, Trust Wallet) — though this adds complexity and you become responsible for your own security.
A Simple Rule
For most Brazilians:
- Under R$ 5,000: Keep on exchange for convenience
- R$ 5,000-50,000: Split between exchange (for active trading) and hardware wallet
- Over R$ 50,000: Hardware wallet becomes essential
For a full review of Bybit for Brazilian users — including BRL P2P options, Portuguese support, and yield products — see the Bybit Brazil review.
Top comments (0)