| Strongest. Both Lemon’s website and the app listing point to Argentine-peso crypto buying or buying-and-selling use cases. |
The App Store wording also mentions “digital dollars” alongside Argentine pesos, Colombian pesos, Peruvian soles and cryptocurrencies. That phrase should not be counted as a separate country fiat currency, because it is not the local currency of a specific national market.
Lemon’s Google Play listing says users can deposit, send, exchange and receive cryptocurrencies; buy, send and receive crypto across 19 blockchain networks; swap between more than 30 tokens; and make commission-free international crypto transfers via $lemontag in 7 Latin American countries.
Those are useful signals about cryptoasset coverage, blockchain network coverage and user-to-user transfer reach. They are not, by themselves, a country-by-country list of local fiat balances, bank deposits or fiat withdrawals. Lemon’s own website similarly highlights 30+ tokens and 16+ blockchain deposit networks, which speaks to crypto and network support rather than the number of national fiat currencies supported.
The same Google Play listing also says users can pay in Brazil with PIX directly from the app. PIX is a Brazilian payments system, so the line is relevant to Brazil-related payment functionality. However, the public snippet does not explicitly confirm a Brazilian local-currency balance, deposit route or withdrawal route. On that evidence alone, Brazil should not be listed as a fully confirmed fiat-support market.
In 2023, BeInCrypto reported that Lemon Cash had integrated the Onramper fiat on-ramp, allowing users in Mexico, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia and Uruguay to buy BTC, ETH, USDC and USDT with local currencies. The report also said users could pay with debit cards, credit cards and bank deposits, and that some providers might require identity verification before transactions.
That supports a narrower claim: Lemon users were reported to have access to a third-party local-currency route for buying crypto in those countries. It does not prove that each country had a native Lemon fiat wallet balance, nor that users could sell crypto back into local bank accounts or withdraw local fiat from Lemon.
Peru and Colombia appear in both the App Store wording and the Onramper report, but the two references mean different things. The App Store text is wallet deposit wording; the Onramper article is about a third-party fiat-to-crypto buying ramp.
If you need to know what is available right now for a specific account, the most reliable check is still inside the Lemon app. Look for:
Based only on public sources, the most careful way to describe Lemon Cash fiat support is:
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