this contradicts what this thread was sharing yesterday:
https://www.expatsba.com/threads/an...imes-can-you-do-border-runs-in-argentina.537/
"I talked to an expat a few months ago that said his partner got rejected coming back as he overstayed and was doing border runs for years. The customs agent told him it was illegal to do border runs."
"For a good 8 years, I played the perpetual tourist game. I'm from Canada. I didn't have any issues at all and then wham bam one day when I was coming from Colonia they wouldn't let me in. I even paid the overstay fee. I got upset at first. Very upset. But the officer pulled me into the room and he spoke decent English explained that I was breaking the law and he was right. You have to know going into this that you're breaking the law."
"This is probably true. I'm one of the unlucky ones that got denied entry. This happened a few years ago. I'm an American citizen. This happened when they were still stamping passports so I imagine now it's even easier for them to see the cumulative days you've been in Argentina between entry/exit. They told me that they could see I was living here and not a tourist. It was pretty humiliating as I was living with my girlfriend and I had all my stuff there. They sent me back to Miami which I flew from."
"It was pretty horrible. I got stuck in a room for about 3 hours. They only gave me some water and I begged for a coffee and they finally brought me some. Then I had to wait for the next flight out. They had me in a room and took my passport. Then to board I had to be escorted by 2 police officers. Or maybe they were airport officials. They had uniforms on. They didn't give me my passport until everyone boarded. I was the last to board. And they told the flight attendants not to give me back my passport until we landed. It was all pretty humiliating."
"if it happened again they wouldn't let me in. He said they would note my file."
there are more on twitter, reddit, and the old forum. maybe the police won't be searching our hotel rooms at day 91 to deport us, but there are more possibilities than than:
1. People who haven't read this forum may apply for an extension at 91 days and be detained, then deported for violating their visa.
2. Tourists who don't know about the ferry/border crossings being strict now may try to cross, and get detained in Uruguay, and sent back home.
3. Long-term perma-tourists with 2 years, hoping they can just pay $20 like old times, may leave the country or have interactions with Migraciones and get banned from Argentina for 5 years.
regardless, the risk appears much more real, than in the past, so it's important not to just dismiss these worries since 'in the past Westerners were allowed to do whatever they wanted'