Somewhere, there is a 200-person WhatsApp group with phone numbers from twelve different Latin American countries, the majority of which are Venezuelan. Someone is virtually always online, setting a rate for transferring money from Madrid to Bogotá or from Miami to Caracas. Not a bank. There is no wire fee. No wait of three days. Bitcoin exchanges hands in an escrow on a peer-to-peer platform when one person posts an amount and another matches it. It takes less than an hour to complete. About 1% is the commission. For the same corridor, Western Union charges between 3% and 7%, and that’s before the receiving end’s foreign exchange spread.
On the periphery of the official financial system, this is not a marginal experiment. It’s one of the more obvious manifestations of a change that has been developing in Latin America for years and has recently accelerated as digital-native banks gain widespread acceptance and stablecoin infrastructure develops. Every year, the region gets over $130 billion in remittances. More than $1 billion in real purchasing power is represented by every percentage point of fees saved or lost on that volume. This money is used by households that depend on it for things like rent, food, school fees, and prescription drugs. For those performing these transfers, the math is not abstract.
| Topic | Details |
|---|---|
| Market Size | Latin America received over $130 billion in remittances annually (2021–2022 figures); traditional market dominated by Western Union, MoneyGram |
| Traditional Transfer Cost | 3–7% of transaction value on key LATAM corridors, including transaction fees ($25–50 per wire), FX spread markups (2–5%), and intermediary “lifting” fees |
| Settlement Time (Traditional) | 24 hours to several days via SWIFT; capital locked in transit throughout |
| Stablecoin Cost Advantage | 30–50% cheaper than traditional rails per BVNK Stablecoin Utility Report 2026 (4,600 users, 15 countries); EY 2025 survey: 41% of users reported at least 10% savings in B2B cross-border payments |
| Western Union Response | Piloting its own dollar-backed stablecoin (USDPT) on the Solana blockchain, issued by Anchorage Digital Bank; aims to connect to 600,000 global agent locations |
| Nubank Stablecoin Adoption | 127 million customers across Brazil, Mexico, Colombia; by mid-2025, 1 in 4 new Nubank Cripto investors chose USDC as their first holding |
| Brazil Stablecoin Activity | Brazil’s Central Bank reported over 90% of crypto transaction volume is stablecoin-denominated; primary use case is cross-border payments |
| High-Adoption Countries | Venezuela, Argentina, Brazil, Mexico, El Salvador — all showed high growth in crypto remittance use (900% worldwide growth cited by Coinpay.cr) |
| Key Challenge | On/off-ramp fees still apply at the fiat conversion legs; volatility risk for non-stablecoin crypto; regulatory uncertainty across multiple jurisdictions |
Western Union and MoneyGram, two businesses that built their franchises on the fact that transferring money across borders used to be genuinely challenging, have long dominated the traditional remittance corridor between the United States and Latin America. To adhere to anti-money-laundering laws in dozens of nations, you required a network of physical agent locations, correspondent banking connections, and the administrative infrastructure. The incumbents charged in accordance with the actual barriers to entry created by those requirements. Families frequently send money because there is no other option, and a $25 wire fee on a $500 transfer represents a 5% toll. For the majority of the decade, there were no practical alternatives, so the fees were accepted.

The alternatives came gradually at first, then all at once. Pix, Brazil’s instant payment system, was introduced in 2020 and, in just two years, rose to the top of the payment landscape. Although it doesn’t operate internationally, it changed Brazilians’ perceptions of cost and payment speed. Nubank began as a credit card startup in São Paulo, expanded to 127 million customers in Brazil, Mexico, and Colombia, and integrated USDC into its consumer platform. By the middle of 2025, one in four new Nubank Cripto investors decided to start with USDC, a dollar-pegged stablecoin rather than Bitcoin or Ethereum. It’s worth sitting with that detail. Most of those users aren’t making assumptions. At a time when Venezuelan bolivars have become harder to hold and Argentine inflation has consistently reduced local savings, they are saving in a stable currency that they can transfer across borders.
The strongest argument for stablecoins and the greatest pressure on Western Union can be found in the cost comparison. Traditional wire transfer costs on the region’s major cross-border routes range from 2 to 7% of transaction value when all factors are taken into account. These factors include the sending bank’s fee, the receiving bank’s fee, the FX spread the bank applies above the mid-market rate without explicitly disclosing it on any fee schedule, and the “lifting fees” that SWIFT correspondent banks charge mid-route. These fees are unpredictable because they depend on which banks happen to be in the chain on a given day. The $1,350 cost of a $50,000 business transfer at a 2.7% FX markup just vanishes into the banking system. According to BVNK’s 2026 stablecoin utility survey, which involved 4,600 users in 15 countries, stablecoin transfers are typically 40% less expensive than traditional remittance channels, with settlement occurring in seconds as opposed to days.
Western Union has taken notice. In order to link its current 600,000 global agent locations to blockchain settlement rails, the company is testing its own dollar-backed stablecoin on the Solana blockchain through Anchorage Digital Bank. More than half of its digital remittances now go to wallets or bank accounts rather than cash pickup, according to management’s discussion of “digital asset-enabled solutions”—a structural change in the way its own clients act. It is an odd and somewhat illuminating development that the company is creating a stablecoin on top of the blockchain rails that were meant to replace it. This could turn into a true modernization. Another possibility is that it’s a hedging strategy by a business observing the erosion of its competitive moat and attempting to acquire the technology before it does.
This isn’t just a tale of crypto displacement because of actual limitations. Converting local currency into a stablecoin and then back into local currency at the receiving end still carries costs and friction that can reduce the savings, which is why the on-ramp and off-ramp problem is still very important. These ramps are frequently negotiated through unofficial peer-to-peer networks, which creates counterparty risk even when it lowers fees, in Venezuela and Argentina, where economic conditions have made cryptocurrency appealing precisely because the local financial system is unstable. Regulatory clarity is inconsistent. El Salvador’s experiment with Bitcoin legal tender garnered media attention but had little real uptake; even at the height of adoption, cryptocurrency remittances accounted for less than 2% of the nation’s inflows. Growth from a very small base is reflected in the frequently reported 900% growth figures.
However, it’s difficult to ignore the fact that the direction of travel is constant throughout the entire market at the same time. The unofficial WhatsApp groups have existed for many years. Neobanks are incorporating stablecoins into their consumer goods. Polygon’s cost analysis is being examined by the correspondent banks. Western Union is developing a blockchain of its own. According to Brazil’s central bank, cross-border payments account for 90% of the nation’s cryptocurrency volume, which is denominated in stablecoins. These actors are not telling the same story. They are several distinct actors who take different paths to reach the same conclusion. More than any single data point, this convergence is likely the strongest indication that the way money is moved in Latin America is changing structurally.

