USD to Afghan Afghani (AFN) Black Market Rate — Afghanistan
By the ETCurrency rates deskUpdated hourly from P2P & exchange-market dataHow we calculate rates
As of June 6, 2026, the USD to Afghan Afghani parallel (black market) rate is approximately 57.5 AFN to buy one US dollar and 73.4 AFN to sell, while the official Da Afghanistan Bank (DAB) rate sits near 63.2 AFN. That leaves a significant premium of about 16.1% between the street and the bank.
Afghanistan's afghani is priced day-to-day at Kabul's Sarai Shahzada money market amid sanctions and frozen reserves.
Why does Afghanistan have a parallel market for the Afghan Afghani?
A parallel (or black) market appears when the official exchange rate no longer reflects what people will actually pay for dollars. In Afghanistan, the gap is driven by factors such as post-2021 sanctions, frozen reserves and aid disruption, cash-dollar scarcity. When official dollars are rationed or priced below their true value, demand spills over to street dealers, bureaus and peer-to-peer (P2P) traders who quote a higher, market-clearing rate.
The wider the shortage and the tighter the controls, the bigger the premium tends to be. That is why the AFN street rate is watched as an early-warning signal for devaluation.
Official rate vs parallel rate: the AFN premium explained
The "premium" is simply how much more expensive the dollar is on the street than at the bank. Today the parallel rate of about 57.5 AFN versus the official 63.2 AFN works out to roughly 16.1%. A larger premium means the market expects the Afghan Afghani to weaken, or that dollars are hard to obtain at the official price.
Watching the premium over time is more useful than any single number: a steadily widening gap usually precedes an official devaluation, while a narrowing gap suggests confidence is returning.
Is it legal to use the black market rate in Afghanistan?
Rules vary by country and change often. Many governments restrict or discourage buying and selling foreign currency outside licensed channels, and some treat parallel-market trading as an offence, while others tolerate informal bureaus. The rates shown here are published for information and price-transparency only — they are not an offer to trade and do not constitute legal or financial advice.
Always confirm the current regulations in Afghanistan and use licensed, reputable channels for any actual transaction. Treat the parallel rate as a reference for what the dollar is really worth, not as an instruction to transact informally.
How to read today's USD to Afghan Afghani rate
Two numbers matter most. The buy rate is how many AFN you need to obtain one dollar; the sell rate is how many AFN you receive when you give one up. The difference between them is the dealer spread — wider spreads usually mean a thinner, more nervous market. We aggregate these from P2P platforms, community reports and exchange monitoring, then refresh them hourly so the figure stays current.
To turn a rate into an amount, use our currency converter, and cross-check the bigger picture with gold and fuel prices in AFN, which often move in step with the parallel dollar. For the reverse direction, see how much one Afghan Afghani is worth in US dollars.