How DeFi is changing the financial landscape for Latin Americans
DeFi is quietly shifting from niche crypto experiment to a legitimate financial tool across the region, explains Serrano.
Historically, navigating DeFi required technical expertise, and that kept adoption limited to early crypto enthusiasts. But major protocols such as Aave are increasingly working with Latin American companies to make their infrastructure usable for everyday consumers. In other words, Latin America is starting to use DeFi primitives thanks to the abstraction provided by local firms.
Enhancing access to DeFi
For most of its existence, DeFi has been the domain of the technically fluent. You needed a self-custody wallet, a working 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 abstraction layer that DeFi has always lacked: user-friendly interfaces, peso- and real-denominated stablecoins, fiat on-ramps that let users move 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 on-ramp. It’s not pure decentralization in the ideological sense, but it’s something arguably more valuable: decentralization that actually gets used.
Latin America, which has long lagged behind other regions in DeFi adoption, is beginning to catch up — not because the underlying technology changed, but because the access to it became easier.
The new tools that DeFi provides
The specific tools DeFi offers are remarkably well-suited to the financial realities of the region.
Take dollar savings. In Brazil, holding U.S. dollars in a bank account earns essentially nothing — most Brazilians have no practical way to generate yield on foreign-currency savings. But DeFi lending markets change that equation. By depositing USDC into a protocol like Aave, users can earn yield generated by global demand for dollar liquidity. For the first time, a saver in Recife can access the same basic financial product that a saver in New York has long enjoyed: a dollar account that actually works for them.
