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Buenos Aires

// Navigate Buenos Aires as visitor, resident, tech worker, student, or entrepreneur with neighborhoods, transport, costs, visas, and local insights.

$ git log --oneline --stat
stars:1,933
forks:367
updated:March 4, 2026
SKILL.mdreadonly
SKILL.md Frontmatter
nameBuenos Aires
slugbuenos-aires
version1.0.1
changelogUnicode cleanup for ClawHub compatibility, added Scope section
homepagehttps://clawic.com/skills/buenos-aires
descriptionNavigate Buenos Aires as visitor, resident, tech worker, student, or entrepreneur with neighborhoods, transport, costs, visas, and local insights.
metadata[object Object]

When to Use

User asks about Buenos Aires for any purpose: visiting, moving, working, studying, or starting a business. Agent provides practical guidance with current data.

Quick Reference

TopicFile
Visitors
Attractions (must-see vs skip)visitor-attractions.md
Itineraries (1/3/7 days)visitor-itineraries.md
Where to stayvisitor-lodging.md
Tips & day tripsvisitor-tips.md
Neighborhoods
Quick comparisonneighborhoods-index.md
Palermo, Belgrano, Nunezneighborhoods-norte.md
Microcentro, San Nicolas, Retironeighborhoods-centro.md
San Telmo, La Boca, Barracasneighborhoods-sur.md
Caballito, Almagro, Villa Cresponeighborhoods-oeste.md
Puerto Madero, Recoletaneighborhoods-premium.md
Choosing guideneighborhoods-choosing.md
Food
Overview & dining scenefood-overview.md
Argentine cuisinefood-local.md
International & fine diningfood-international.md
Best areas for diningfood-areas.md
Dietary, tipping, customsfood-practical.md
Practical
Moving & settlingresident.md
Transport (subte, colectivos, taxis)transport.md
Cost of livingcost.md
Safety & securitysafety.md
Weather & seasonal tipsclimate.md
Local services (banking, SIM)local.md
Career
Tech industry & salariestech.md
Business setup & regulationsbusiness.md
Visas (work, residency, digital nomad)visas.md
Startups & fundingstartup.md
Lifestyle
Culture & customsculture.md
Healthcare & insurancehealthcare.md
Schools & educationeducation.md
Expat lifestyle & sociallifestyle.md
Driving & car ownershipdriving.md

Core Rules

1. Identify User Context First

  • Role: Tourist, resident, tech worker, student, entrepreneur, digital nomad
  • Timeline: Short visit, planning to move, already there
  • Load relevant auxiliary file for details

2. Economic Context (Critical)

Argentina has chronic inflation (~140% annually in 2024) and currency controls:

  • Official rate vs "blue dollar": Significant gap (30-40% historically)
  • MEP/CCL rates: Legal alternatives for better exchange
  • Crypto adoption: Very high due to currency instability
  • Dollar preference: Many transactions quoted in USD See cost.md for current rates and strategies.

3. Cultural Context

Buenos Aires is the most European city in South America:

  • Spanish influence: Architecture, cafe culture, late dining
  • Italian influence: 60%+ of population has Italian ancestry, affects food and gestures
  • Tango: Cultural institution, not just for tourists
  • Futbol (soccer): Religion-level passion, Boca vs River divides the city
  • Late night culture: Dinner at 10pm, clubs open at 2am See culture.md for detailed guidance.

4. Weather Reality

  • Summer (Dec-Feb): 28-35C, humid, many locals leave in January
  • Winter (Jun-Aug): 8-15C, gray, limited heating in buildings
  • Best months: March-May (autumn), September-November (spring)
  • No central heating: Most apartments use space heaters See climate.md for monthly breakdown.

5. Current Data (Feb 2026)

ItemRange (USD at blue rate)
1BR rent (Palermo)$400-700/month
1BR rent (Recoleta)$500-800/month
1BR rent (outer barrios)$250-400/month
Senior SWE salary (USD)$3,000-6,000/month
Subte monthly pass~$15
Dinner for 2 (nice restaurant)$30-60
Asado for 4 at home$20-30

6. Cost Reality

Buenos Aires is very affordable for dollar earners:

  • Housing: 20-30% of budget typical for expats
  • Food: Excellent quality at low prices (especially beef, wine)
  • Services: Very cheap (cleaning, laundry, repairs)
  • Tech salaries: Often paid in USD, huge advantage
  • Hidden costs: Importing goods expensive, electronics cost 2-3x US prices

7. Transit Options

Buenos Aires has good public transport, especially vs other LATAM cities:

  • Subte: 6 lines, cheap, crowded at rush hour
  • Colectivos (buses): 140+ lines, 24/7, covers entire city
  • Taxis/Ride-hailing: Cheap, Uber/Cabify widely used
  • SUBE card: Essential for all public transport Most residents don't own cars in central areas. See transport.md.

8. Neighborhood Matching

ProfileBest Areas
Young professionals/Digital nomadsPalermo Soho, Palermo Hollywood, Villa Crespo
FamiliesBelgrano, Nunez, Caballito
Budget-conscious expatsAlmagro, Boedo, Villa Crespo
Luxury seekersPuerto Madero, Recoleta
Artists/BohemianSan Telmo, La Boca (Caminito area only)
Tech workersPalermo, Belgrano, Puerto Madero

Visa Context

Unlike Dubai, Argentina has relatively easy immigration:

  • Tourist visa: 90 days, extendable once (180 total)
  • Digital nomad visa: 6-12 months, renewable
  • Work visa: Employer-sponsored, becoming more common in tech
  • Residency: Relatively easy through rentista, investor, or ancestry
  • Citizenship: Possible after 2 years of residency See visas.md for detailed requirements.

Buenos Aires-Specific Traps

  • Blue dollar confusion - Always know the parallel rate. Official rate = losing 30-40%.
  • January exodus - City empties out. Many businesses close. Plan around it.
  • Crime awareness - Express kidnapping, phone theft common. Be street smart.
  • Building heating - Central heating rare. Winter apartments get COLD.
  • Sunday closures - Many restaurants/shops closed Sundays, especially outside Palermo.
  • Cash dependency - Despite crypto adoption, many places cash-only (at blue rate).
  • Import taxes - Electronics, clothes, anything imported costs 2-3x.
  • Restaurant tipping - 10% expected, but some include "cubierto" (cover charge).
  • Spanish requirement - Less English spoken than expected. Learn basics.
  • Afternoon closure - Some businesses close 1-5pm (siesta culture).

Safety Awareness

Buenos Aires is generally safe but requires street smarts:

  • Tourist areas: Well-patrolled, relatively safe
  • Phone theft: Very common, don't use phone obviously on street
  • Express kidnapping: Rare but real, avoid displaying wealth
  • ATMs: Use inside banks, never at night
  • Areas to avoid: La Boca (outside Caminito), Once at night, Constitucion See safety.md for comprehensive guidance.

Expat Community

Buenos Aires has a large, established expat community:

  • Digital nomad hubs: Palermo cafes, coworking spaces
  • Expat groups: Active Facebook groups, meetups
  • Languages spoken: Spanish dominant, English in tech/tourism
  • Integration: Easier than many cities due to welcoming culture
  • Dating scene: Active, Tinder/Bumble popular

Legal Awareness

Key laws visitors/residents should know:

  • Marijuana: Decriminalized for personal use, but selling illegal
  • Alcohol: Legal at 18, widely available
  • Protests: Common, mostly peaceful, avoid area during
  • Photography: Generally permitted, ask before photographing people
  • Noise laws: Exist but loosely enforced, expect late-night noise
  • Consumer rights: Strong protection laws, refunds possible

Scope

This skill ONLY:

  • Provides information about Buenos Aires for visitors, residents, and workers
  • References auxiliary files with detailed neighborhood, food, and practical guides
  • Gives current data on costs, visas, and local services

This skill NEVER:

  • Makes network requests or API calls
  • Accesses calendar, email, or contacts
  • Stores data or creates files
  • Executes code or scripts
  • Modifies its own SKILL.md