For decades, Latin Americans have lived with financial constraints that citizens of more developed economies rarely think about: periodic currency devaluations, inflation shocks, limited access to credit and banking systems that often fail to reward savers.
A new layer of innovation is now reshaping the region’s financial landscape. Decentralized finance – DeFi – is quietly evolving from a niche crypto experiment to a practical set of tools that are expanding financial opportunities across the region.
Historically, navigating DeFi required technical expertise, limiting adoption to early crypto enthusiasts. But major protocols like Aave are increasingly working with Latin American companies to make their infrastructure usable by everyday consumers. In other words, Latin America is starting to adopt DeFi primitives thanks to the abstraction provided by local companies.
Improving access to DeFi
For most of its existence, DeFi has been the domain of the tech-savvy. You needed a self-managed wallet, an understanding of blockchain mechanics, and a tolerance for complex interfaces. For the average person in Mexico City or São Paulo, that was an almost insurmountable barrier.
But things are changing. Latin American fintech companies are now building the layer of abstraction that DeFi has always lacked: easy-to-use interfaces, peso- and real-denominated stablecoins, fiat-on-ramps that allow users to switch seamlessly between cash and crypto, and custody solutions that don’t require understanding what a private key is.
The result is a hybrid model. Global protocols provide the rails; local companies provide the ramp. It is not pure decentralization in an ideological sense, but it is something that is demonstrably more valuable: decentralization that is actually used.
Latin America, which long lagged behind other regions in DeFi adoption, is starting to catch up – not because the underlying technology changed, but because access to it became easier.
The new tools that DeFi offers
The specific tools that DeFi offers are remarkably well suited to the region’s financial realities.
Take dollar savings. In Brazil, holding US dollars in a bank account actually yields nothing; most Brazilians have no practical way to generate returns on foreign currency savings. But DeFi credit markets are changing that equation. By depositing USDC into a protocol like Aave, users can earn returns generated by the global demand for dollar liquidity. For the first time, a saver in Recife has access to the same basic financial product that a saver in New York has long enjoyed: a dollar account that really works for him or her.
Then there is the issue of liquidity. Across the region, a significant number of people own bitcoin or ether as a long-term store of value, especially in countries with volatile local currencies. Until recently, accessing that value meant selling, which triggers tax events and comes with a loss of exposure.
DeFi protocols have eliminated that trade-off. Users can now deposit BTC or ETH as collateral and borrow stablecoins against it, gaining access to liquidity without surrendering the asset. It’s the equivalent of a home equity line of credit, except the collateral is digital and the loan can be executed in minutes at any hour of the day.
These are not exotic financial instruments. They are basic tools of modern financial life that many Latin Americans have never had access to.
Achieving broader financial inclusion
Traditional financial systems have always had a geographic problem. Credit markets are local and returns depend on where you live. A saver in Lima has never been able to earn the same returns on her dollar deposits as a saver in London, simply because the infrastructure connecting her to global capital markets does not exist.
DeFi removes that geographic problem. As long as you have an internet connection, you can participate in the same credit markets, earn the same returns, and access the same liquidity as anyone else. Latin American fintechs are making it easier to tap into the global DeFi market.
Traditional lending in Latin America is also burdened by an underwriting infrastructure built for a different era. There are strict income documentation requirements, and credit scoring systems typically exclude large segments of the population.
DeFi lending is based on collateral and not identity. If you have assets, you have access regardless of whether you have a credit history or a formal employment contract. The market is always available to you, no matter what.
This does not mean that DeFi is without risk. Vulnerabilities in smart contracts, protocol flaws and collateral volatility are real concerns that the industry is still working to address. But the trajectory is clear. As Latin American companies continue to build accessible regulatory interfaces and bridges, and as protocols mature and build track records, barriers to entry will continue to fall.

