Latin America moves over $150 billion annually in cross-border payments — including remittances, B2B trade settlements, and freelancer payouts. Yet the region's payment infrastructure remains fragmented, expensive, and slow. For businesses and individuals sending money across borders in LATAM, the question is no longer if stablecoins will play a role, but how fast they will replace legacy rails.
This guide provides an honest, data-driven comparison between traditional cross-border payment methods and stablecoin-based alternatives in Latin America, helping you understand which approach fits your use case.
The State of Cross-Border Payments in Latin America
Latin America is one of the world's largest remittance corridors. In 2025, remittances to Latin America and the Caribbean reached $160 billion, according to the World Bank Migration and Development Brief. Mexico alone received over $65 billion, making it the second-largest remittance recipient globally.
But cross-border payments in LATAM extend far beyond remittances:
B2B trade payments between LATAM countries and global suppliers
Freelancer and contractor payouts from US/EU companies to LATAM talent
E-commerce settlements for cross-border marketplaces
Treasury management for multinationals operating across LATAM subsidiaries
Despite the massive volume, the traditional infrastructure serving these flows is plagued by inefficiencies.
Traditional Cross-Border Payment Methods in LATAM
SWIFT and Correspondent Banking
The dominant method for B2B cross-border payments still relies on SWIFT messaging and correspondent banking networks. Here's what that looks like in practice:
Speed: 2-5 business days (sometimes longer for exotic currency pairs)
Cost: $25-$50 per wire transfer, plus FX spreads of 1-4%
Transparency: Limited — senders often don't know the final amount recipients will receive
Availability: Business hours only, weekdays only
For a $10,000 B2B payment from the US to Brazil, the total cost (fees + FX spread) can easily reach $300-$500 — a 3-5% drag on every transaction.
Money Transfer Operators (MTOs)
Companies like Western Union, MoneyGram, and Remitly serve the remittance corridor. While they've improved digitally, the economics remain challenging:
Speed: Minutes to 2 days depending on payout method
Cost: 3-7% for the average remittance according to the World Bank Remittance Prices Database
Limitations: Transaction size limits, limited business use, compliance friction
Key statistic: The global average cost of sending $200 in remittances remains around 6.2% as of Q4 2025 (World Bank), well above the UN Sustainable Development Goal target of 3%.
Regional Payment Systems
Some LATAM countries have developed bilateral or regional payment systems:
SPI/Pix International (Brazil): Brazil's Central Bank is expanding Pix for cross-border use, but adoption remains limited
SPEI (Mexico): Domestic only, though integrated with some cross-border services
CoDi (Mexico): Mobile payment system, primarily domestic
These systems improve domestic payments significantly but do little for cross-border corridors between LATAM countries or between LATAM and the rest of the world.
Stablecoin Cross-Border Payments: A New Paradigm
How Stablecoin Cross-Border Payments Work
1. Sender converts local currency to stablecoins (e.g., BRL → USDC) via a local on-ramp
2. Stablecoins are transferred on-chain to the recipient's wallet (seconds, minimal fees)
3. Recipient converts stablecoins to local currency (e.g., USDC → MXN) via a local off-ramp
The key innovation: the middle mile — the actual cross-border transfer — happens on blockchain rails instead of correspondent banking networks.
Real Cost Savings
Let's quantify the impact. Consider a LATAM-based company making 50 cross-border payments per month averaging $5,000 each:
Traditional SWIFT: 50 × ($40 fee + 2.5% FX spread) = $8,250/month
Stablecoin rails: 50 × ($5 fee + 0.3% FX spread) = $1,000/month
Monthly savings: $7,250 (88% cost reduction)
Annual savings: $87,000
For larger enterprises processing millions monthly, the savings scale into the hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars per year.
Key LATAM Corridors Where Stablecoins Excel
US → Mexico (Remittances)
The largest remittance corridor in the world. Traditional costs average 4-6%. Stablecoin rails can reduce this to under 1%, saving migrant workers billions collectively.
US/EU → Brazil (Freelancer Payouts)
Brazil's booming tech talent market means thousands of freelancers receive international payments. Traditional wire transfers take 3-5 days and cost 3-5%. Stablecoin payouts settle in minutes at a fraction of the cost.
Argentina → Anywhere (Capital Preservation)
With inflation exceeding 100% annually, Argentinians increasingly use stablecoins not just for cross-border payments but as a store of value. USDC and USDT adoption in Argentina has skyrocketed, with the country ranking among the top 5 globally in P2P stablecoin volume per capita.
Intra-LATAM B2B Trade
Trade payments between LATAM countries (Brazil → Colombia, Mexico → Chile, etc.) often route through US correspondent banks, adding days and costs. Stablecoins enable direct settlement without the US detour.
Compliance and Regulatory Considerations
Brazil
Brazil's Crypto Asset Regulatory Framework (Law 14,478/2022, regulated by the Central Bank) established clear rules for virtual asset service providers (VASPs). The Central Bank of Brazil has been proactive in integrating stablecoins into the broader payment ecosystem.
Mexico
Mexico's Fintech Law (Ley Fintech) regulates virtual assets and requires licensing for platforms operating with cryptocurrencies. The regulatory environment is evolving, with increasing clarity around stablecoin-based payment services.
Argentina
Argentina's regulatory approach has been more permissive, partly driven by the economic necessity of dollar-denominated alternatives. The CNV (Comisión Nacional de Valores) oversees crypto regulations with a relatively open stance.
Colombia
Colombia operates in a regulatory sandbox model, with the Superintendencia Financiera allowing controlled experimentation with crypto-based financial services.
Key Compliance Requirements Across LATAM
Regardless of jurisdiction, stablecoin cross-border payment providers must implement:
KYC/KYB: Identity verification for individuals and businesses
AML/CFT: Anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing controls
Transaction monitoring: Real-time screening against sanctions lists
Travel Rule compliance: Sharing sender/receiver information between VASPs
Tax reporting: Proper documentation for tax authorities in each jurisdiction
Infrastructure providers like Lumx handle these compliance requirements at the API level, so businesses building on stablecoin rails don't need to build compliance infrastructure from scratch.
Challenges and Limitations
On-ramp/Off-ramp Friction
Converting between local fiat currencies and stablecoins still involves friction — local banking partners, compliance processes, and sometimes limited liquidity in smaller markets.
Regulatory Uncertainty
While the regulatory direction is positive across LATAM, rules are still evolving. Businesses need partners who actively monitor and adapt to regulatory changes.
Blockchain Literacy
Many businesses and individuals aren't familiar with blockchain technology. The best stablecoin payment solutions abstract away the blockchain complexity, presenting users with a familiar payment experience.
Stablecoin De-peg Risk
Although major stablecoins like USDC maintain strong reserves and regulatory compliance, the theoretical risk of a de-peg event exists. Using regulated, audited stablecoins mitigates this risk significantly.
Building Cross-Border Payment Solutions with Stablecoin Infrastructure
Using an infrastructure provider like Lumx gives you:
A single API for multi-country stablecoin payments
Built-in compliance (KYC, AML, transaction monitoring)
Pre-established on-ramp/off-ramp rails across LATAM
Settlement in local currencies
24/7 availability
The Future of Cross-Border Payments in LATAM
Key statistic: According to Chainalysis Geography of Cryptocurrency Report 2025, Latin America is the fastest-growing region for stablecoin adoption, with year-over-year transaction volume growth exceeding 40%.
Trends to watch:
Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs): Brazil's Drex and other LATAM CBDCs will create new interoperability opportunities with stablecoins
Regulatory maturation: Clearer rules attract institutional capital and mainstream adoption
Embedded finance: Cross-border stablecoin payments embedded directly in e-commerce, payroll, and ERP platforms
Multi-stablecoin ecosystems: BRL-pegged, MXN-pegged, and other local stablecoins complementing USD stablecoins
The trajectory is clear: stablecoins will become the default rail for cross-border payments in Latin America within this decade.
Conclusion
Cross-border payments in Latin America are at an inflection point. Traditional methods — built on decades-old correspondent banking infrastructure — cost too much, take too long, and lack transparency. Stablecoin-based payment rails offer a 10x improvement across cost, speed, and accessibility.
For businesses, fintechs, and platforms operating in LATAM, the decision isn't whether to adopt stablecoin rails — it's how quickly you can integrate them into your payment workflows.
What are cross-border payments in Latin America?
Cross-border payments in Latin America refer to financial transfers between parties in different LATAM countries or between LATAM and the rest of the world. These include remittances, B2B trade settlements, freelancer payouts, and e-commerce transactions. The region processes over $150 billion annually in cross-border flows.
How do stablecoins reduce cross-border payment costs in LATAM?
Stablecoins reduce costs by eliminating intermediaries from the payment chain. Traditional cross-border payments route through correspondent banks, each charging fees. Stablecoin transfers happen directly on blockchain networks with minimal transaction fees, typically reducing total costs from 3-7% to under 0.5%. For a $10,000 payment, this can mean savings of $250-$650 per transaction.
Are stablecoin cross-border payments legal in Brazil and Mexico?
Yes. Brazil has established a comprehensive crypto regulatory framework (Law 14,478/2022) overseen by the Central Bank, and Mexico's Fintech Law (Ley Fintech) provides a licensing framework for virtual asset services. Both countries allow regulated entities to offer stablecoin-based payment services with proper KYC/AML compliance.
How fast are stablecoin cross-border payments compared to traditional wire transfers?
Stablecoin cross-border transfers settle in under 60 seconds, compared to 2-5 business days for traditional SWIFT wire transfers. Including on-ramp and off-ramp processing, end-to-end settlement typically takes minutes to a few hours, still dramatically faster than traditional methods.





