SkillHub

buenos-aires

v1.0.1

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

Sourced from ClawHub, Authored by Iván

Installation

Please help me install the skill `buenos-aires` from SkillHub official store. npx skills add ivangdavila/buenos-aires

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

Topic File
Visitors
Attractions (must-see vs skip) visitor-attractions.md
Itineraries (1/3/7 days) visitor-itineraries.md
Where to stay visitor-lodging.md
Tips & day trips visitor-tips.md
Neighborhoods
Quick comparison neighborhoods-index.md
Palermo, Belgrano, Nunez neighborhoods-norte.md
Microcentro, San Nicolas, Retiro neighborhoods-centro.md
San Telmo, La Boca, Barracas neighborhoods-sur.md
Caballito, Almagro, Villa Crespo neighborhoods-oeste.md
Puerto Madero, Recoleta neighborhoods-premium.md
Choosing guide neighborhoods-choosing.md
Food
Overview & dining scene food-overview.md
Argentine cuisine food-local.md
International & fine dining food-international.md
Best areas for dining food-areas.md
Dietary, tipping, customs food-practical.md
Practical
Moving & settling resident.md
Transport (subte, colectivos, taxis) transport.md
Cost of living cost.md
Safety & security safety.md
Weather & seasonal tips climate.md
Local services (banking, SIM) local.md
Career
Tech industry & salaries tech.md
Business setup & regulations business.md
Visas (work, residency, digital nomad) visas.md
Startups & funding startup.md
Lifestyle
Culture & customs culture.md
Healthcare & insurance healthcare.md
Schools & education education.md
Expat lifestyle & social lifestyle.md
Driving & car ownership driving.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)

Item Range (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

Profile Best Areas
Young professionals/Digital nomads Palermo Soho, Palermo Hollywood, Villa Crespo
Families Belgrano, Nunez, Caballito
Budget-conscious expats Almagro, Boedo, Villa Crespo
Luxury seekers Puerto Madero, Recoleta
Artists/Bohemian San Telmo, La Boca (Caminito area only)
Tech workers Palermo, 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

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