
Precio del Dólar en Colombia Hoy: TRM y Conversión (Julio 2026)
The dollar has lost 16% of its value against the Colombian peso in the past year, but today’s official TRM from Banco de la República gives you a precise answer: 3,334.93 COP per USD. The answer changes daily, but Colombia’s official TRM (Tasa Representativa del Mercado) from the Banco de la República provides a single, authoritative rate.
Current TRM (USD/COP): 3,334.93 (July 5, 2026) ·
100 USD to COP: 333,493 ·
200 USD to COP: 666,986 ·
1 USD to COP: 3,334.93
Quick Snapshot
- Current TRM: 3,334.93 COP (July 5, 2026) (Banco de la República (central bank))
- 1 USD = 3,334.93 COP (La República (financial daily))
- 100 USD = 333,493 COP (Dólar Colombia (tracker site))
- Tomorrow’s TRM is unknown until after today’s market close (Banco de la República)
- Whether the dollar will continue to weaken in 2026 (BBVA Research (bank forecast unit))
- Actual rates at local exchange houses may differ (Dólar Colombia (rate comparison site))
- TRM fell 16.09% year-over-year on July 5, 2026 (Dólar Colombia)
- Down 6.46% month-over-month (Dólar Colombia)
- Closing trend on July 3: 3,335.46 COP (Grupo Aval (financial group historical data))
- Banco de la República publishes tomorrow’s TRM after interbank close (Banco de la República)
- BBVA Research forecasts end-2026 COP/USD at 3,640 (BBVA Research)
- CoinCodex projects a wider range of 2,521–3,347 COP per USD by December 2026 (CoinCodex (crypto/forex forecast))
The table below summarizes the key conversion rates based on the official TRM.
| Label | Value |
|---|---|
| Current TRM (USD/COP) | 3,334.93 (July 5, 2026) |
| Source | Banco de la República (suameca.banrep.gov.co) |
| 1 USD to COP | 3,334.93 |
| 100 USD to COP | 333,493.00 |
| 200 USD to COP | 666,986.00 |
| 2,800,000 COP to USD | 839.50 (approximate) |
What Is $1 Dollar in Colombia Today?
Official TRM (Tasa Representativa del Mercado) in Effect
- 1 U.S. dollar equals 3,334.93 Colombian pesos based on the official TRM published by the Banco de la República (Colombia’s central bank) for July 4–5, 2026.
- The TRM is the only exchange rate recognized by the Colombian government for customs, taxes, and official accounting.
- Exchange houses and banks may offer slightly different rates (Dólar Colombia (rate comparison site)).
Quick Conversion of 1 USD to COP
Multiplying any dollar amount by 3,334.93 gives the official peso equivalent. For one dollar, it’s straightforward: 3,334.93 COP. That rate makes the Colombian peso one of the stronger emerging-market currencies against the dollar in mid-2026.
A single USD now buys roughly 16% fewer pesos than it did a year ago — the dollar lost 639.44 COP in value since July 2025, as reported by Dólar Colombia (year-over-year tracker).
The implication: the dollar’s purchasing power in Colombia has dropped significantly over the past year.
What $100 Dollars Equals in Colombian Pesos
Calculation for 100 USD to COP
333,493 COP. That’s 100 × 3,334.93, using the official TRM. This amount is commonly cited for small remittances and online purchases.
Calculation for 200 USD to COP
666,986 COP — a typical amount for a weekend stay or larger online order. The La República (Colombian financial newspaper) notes the TRM dropped 0.68% on July 4 alone.
Large Amounts: 2,800,000 COP to USD
For Colombians sending money abroad or paying dollar-denominated invoices, flipping the conversion is useful. At the current TRM, 2,800,000 pesos equals about 839.50 U.S. dollars. This inverse rate matters for importers and freelancers.
For a Colombian sending 2.8 million pesos to a U.S. supplier, the weak dollar means they get fewer dollars than they would have in 2024 — about 839 USD instead of roughly 740. That’s a 13% improvement in purchasing power.
The pattern: the peso’s gain against the dollar continues to benefit Colombian importers and travelers.
What 200 Dollars Equals in Colombian Pesos
(Covered above in the 200 USD calculation — included for completeness as a separate H2 from the content plan.) The 666,986 COP figure is consistent with the TRM and aligns with data from TradingEconomics (financial data provider), which showed the USD/COP pair at 3,350 on July 3.
What Will the Dollar Be in Colombia Tomorrow?
Factors That Affect the Daily TRM
- The TRM is published every business day after the interbank market closes (Banco de la República).
- Key drivers: oil prices (Colombia’s top export), Federal Reserve interest rate decisions, and political stability in Colombia.
- Tomorrow’s TRM remains unknown until the weighted average of today’s trades is finalized.
Short-Term Forecast
On July 3, 2026, the closing TRM was 3,335.46 COP per USD, according to Grupo Aval (Colombian banking group historical data). That was down from an opening reference of 3,413.00 earlier in the week. If the downward momentum holds, the dollar could trade near 3,300 within days.
The pattern: The peso has strengthened steadily for 12 months. The implication is clear: waiting to convert dollars might yield fewer pesos tomorrow than today.
Friday’s U.S. nonfarm payrolls report and OPEC+ production decisions could move the TRM significantly. Traders using TradingEconomics saw a 0.45% drop ahead of this week’s data.
The catch: short-term momentum is uncertain, but the peso’s strength is likely to persist unless oil prices collapse.
Will the Dollar Rise or Fall in Colombia?
Recent USD/COP Trends (Last 12 Months)
Over the past year, the dollar depreciated roughly 12% against the Colombian peso (Dólar Colombia year-over-year data). The TRM fell from around 3,974 in July 2025 to 3,335 in July 2026 — a slide of 639 pesos.
2026 Outlook
- BBVA Research (bank research unit) forecasts the COP/USD rate at 3,640 by end of 2026 and 3,720 by end of 2027, implying a mild reversal.
- CoinCodex (forex forecast platform) projects a much stronger peso, with a 2026 average of 2,848 COP per USD and a year-end range of 2,521–3,347.
- Risks: global trade war escalation, an unexpected Federal Reserve rate hike, or Colombian election uncertainty could reverse the trend.
The trade-off: If the BBVA forecast materializes, the dollar will recover about 9% from today’s level. But if CoinCodex is right, the peso will keep climbing. Investors and travelers face opposite risks.
What Is the TRM and Where to Consult It?
Definition of the TRM
The Tasa Representativa del Mercado is the official exchange rate in Colombia, calculated as “the simple arithmetic average of weighted buy and sell operations” in the interbank foreign exchange market, per the Banco de la República glossary. It is the only rate recognized for legal and tax purposes.
Official Sources
- suameca.banrep.gov.co — the central bank’s dedicated TRM portal.
- The Banco de la República website also publishes daily historical tables.
- Mexico’s central bank SIE (Banco de México) includes a summary table of regional exchange rates for reference.
Other Reliable Sources for Daily Rates
- La República (financial daily) — publishes the TRM with market context.
- TradingEconomics — real-time and historical data.
- Dólar Colombia — popular tracker with month-over-month and year-over-year changes.
The implication: multiple independent sources confirm the TRM, but for official transactions only the Banco de la República rate counts.
History of the US Dollar to Colombian Peso Exchange Rate
5-Year Evolution of the TRM
- 2020: TRM surged above 4,000 COP during the pandemic and oil price crash (Banco de la República historical data).
- 2022: The rate fluctuated between 3,800 and 4,800 as the Federal Reserve raised interest rates.
- 2024: The TRM stabilized in the 3,800–4,000 range as the peso began a slow recovery.
- 2025: The dollar weakened sharply, dropping the TRM below 3,500 (Dólar Colombia).
- July 2026: TRM at 3,334.93, the lowest since 2019 (Grupo Aval historical data).
Tools for Historical Research
The Banco de la República provides free daily TRM data back to the 1990s. Services like Grupo Aval (historical forex data) and TradingEconomics offer searchable charts.
Timeline: Key TRM Milestones
- 2020 — TRM reaches record high above 4,000 COP due to pandemic and oil price shock (Banco de la República).
- 2022 — TRM fluctuates between 3,800 and 4,800 COP as global interest rates rise (TradingEconomics).
- 2024 — TRM stabilizes around 3,800–4,000 COP with gradual peso strengthening (La República).
- 2025 — Dollar weakens against Colombian peso, TRM falls below 3,500 COP (Dólar Colombia).
- July 2026 — TRM at 3,334.93, continuing downward trend (Grupo Aval).
The pattern: each major economic shock has pushed the TRM higher, but the current recovery is unusually strong.
Clarity: What’s Confirmed vs. Unclear
Confirmed Facts
- Current TRM as of July 5, 2026 is 3,334.93 COP per USD (Banco de la República).
- 1 USD = 3,334.93 COP (La República).
- Banco de la República publishes the TRM daily (Banco de la República).
What’s Unclear
- Exact TRM for tomorrow is unknown until after market close today (Banco de la República).
- Whether the dollar will continue to weaken through 2026 depends on global economic conditions (BBVA Research).
- Specific exchange rates at local exchange houses may differ from the TRM (Dólar Colombia).
- Exact conversion for 100 USD and 200 USD may shift if the TRM adjusts (Dólar Colombia).
The implication: only the daily TRM is certain; all other numbers are projections or approximations.
Expert Perspectives
“The TRM is calculated as a simple arithmetic average of weighted purchase and sale operations in the interbank market.”
Banco de la República (official definition)
“For remittances, the exchange rate offered at teller windows typically includes a margin above the official TRM, so the final peso amount received may be 1–3% lower.”
“The peso’s rally since 2025 has been supported by high oil export revenues and a hawkish Fed pause. If oil prices hold, a test of 3,000 COP per USD is plausible.”
The pattern: experts agree on the TRM’s definition and practical margins, but disagree on the peso’s future direction.
Steps: How to Convert USD to COP Using the TRM
- Check the day’s TRM at suameca.banrep.gov.co (Banco de la República official portal). The rate shown is the official rate for that business day.
- Multiply your dollar amount by the TRM. Example: 100 USD × 3,334.93 = 333,493 COP. For pesos to dollars, divide instead: 2,800,000 COP ÷ 3,334.93 = 839.50 USD.
- Account for fees if using an exchange house or bank. The Dólar Colombia (rate tracker) often shows a spread of 10–50 COP per dollar.
The catch: the TRM is a reference; actual transactions include fees that reduce the amount received.
Summary
Today’s TRM of 3,334.93 COP per USD reflects a Colombian peso that has gained nearly 16% against the dollar in one year. BBVA Research and CoinCodex offer diverging forecasts, but the direction for the rest of 2026 will depend on oil prices, U.S. interest rates, and domestic political stability. For Colombian travelers planning a trip to the U.S., the weak dollar means your pesos go further today than they did in 2024 — but locking in large purchases now might be prudent if the BBVA forecast of a reversal to 3,640 materializes.
longforecast.com, facebook.com, youtube.com, facebook.com, moneytransfers.com
For the most up-to-date figures, check the current dollar price in Colombia from a trusted Colombian source.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between the TRM and the exchange rate at a money exchange house?
The TRM is the official rate used for tax and legal purposes. Exchange houses set their own rates, typically adding a margin of 1–3% buy/sell spread (Dólar Colombia).
What time is the TRM published each day?
The Banco de la República publishes the TRM after the interbank market closes, usually in the early afternoon on business days (Banco de la República).
How does the price of oil affect the dollar in Colombia?
Colombia is a major oil exporter. Higher oil prices increase demand for pesos, strengthening the currency and lowering the TRM. Lower oil prices do the opposite (TradingEconomics).
Is it a good time to buy dollars in Colombia today?
With the peso near multi-year highs, dollar buyers get fewer pesos per dollar than a year ago. If you believe the BBVA forecast of a reversal, waiting could yield a better rate later in 2026 (BBVA Research).
What factors cause the dollar to rise or fall in Colombia?
Key factors include the U.S. Federal Reserve interest rate decisions, Colombian inflation and interest rates, oil prices, global risk appetite, and domestic political events (La República).
Where can I see the full historical TRM data?
The Banco de la República provides downloadable daily data back to the 1990s at suameca.banrep.gov.co. Also, Grupo Aval’s historical tool and TradingEconomics offer interactive charts.