September 22, 2025

The mobile payment revolution in Latin America

  • Digital Payments
  • Latin America
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Daniel Flores
Global Head of Product

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In just ten years Latin America has undergone a payment transformation: digital payments transaction volumes are projected to reach USD 0.3 trillion by 2027, growing at over 10% annually since 2022. 

In 2014, cash was king, dominating 67% of in-store transactions; today it accounts for just 25%. And it isn’t traditional cards that have risen to prominence. It’s QR codes and mobile-first platforms, such as digital wallets and instant payments, that turn every phone into a way to pay. 

 

This journey isn’t over either. In Latin America, digital payments transaction volumes are projected to reach USD 0.3 trillion by 2027, growing at over 10% annually since 2022. In e-commerce this shift has been even more dramatic. Digital payments now account for 48% of all online transactions, up from just 14% in 2022, and are projected to account for 66% by 2030. 

 

From Argentina’s Mercado Pago's to Brazil's revolutionary PIX system, mobile payment methods are becoming the universal language of payments across Latin America. 

 

 

The four pillars of Latin America’s mobile payment ecosystem 

 

 

Mobile wallets

 

Mobile wallets are the backbone of Latin America’s digital payment revolution. Over 64% of the region’s population use mobile internet, meaning the infrastructure for widespread wallet adoption is firmly in place. And adoption rates are impressive, with 60% of the population using mobile wallets or payment apps for everyday transactions. 

 

Mobile wallets are digital software applications on phones that securely store users’ payment information such as credit, debit or stored value cards. When a payment is made, the wallet app transmits encrypted payment data using technologies like Bluetooth, WiFi, Near Field Communication (NFC), or Magnetic Secure Transmission (MST) to a point-of-sale terminal. The transaction data is securely routed via payment processors, card networks, and banks, which approve and settle the payment. 

 

Mobile wallets include global players like Apple Pay, Google Pay and Samsung Pay, which allow card-based tap-to-pay transactions through phones, alongside regional leaders such as PicPay and Nubank. These solutions are seeing high adoption rates, with mobile wallets becoming the default for everything from splitting checks to paying utility bills. In 2024, digital wallets accounted for 50% of Argentina’s e-commerce payments, surpassing credit cards, which held nearly 55% just a year earlier. Meanwhile Brazil and Mexico are experiencing rapid growth, with digital wallet adoption increasing by 45% annually.

 

In Brazil, PicPay leads as the most popular digital wallet, with over 70 million registered users, while Nubank, active in Mexico, Colombia and Brazil, has more than 100 million registered users.

Wearables

 

Wearables represent a new frontier in mobile payments. 

 

Increasingly, wearable devices like smartwatches and smart rings are becoming powerful payment tools. By embedding NFC chips, these devices allow users to make tap-to-pay transactions with a simple movement. This offers consumers the speed and convenience even a smartphone can’t give – whether catching public transport or buying coffee on the go. 

 

While still at an earlier stage compared to wallets, the market potential is striking. The wearable payments devices market in the region is expected to reach US $9.8 million by 2028, growing at a remarkable 30.9% CAGR from 2022 to 2028. Looking at specific markets, the wearable technology market in Brazil is projected to generate US $1.95 million by 2030, expanding at a steady 5% CAGR from 2025 to 2030. Meanwhile, the wearable market in Argentina is forecast to reach US $1.38 million by 2030, with a rapid 25.5% CAGR between 2024 and 2030.25.5% CAGR between 2024 and 2030.

 

While adoption is still at an earlier stage compared to mobile wallets, global providers such as Apple (Apple Watch), Samsung (Galaxy Watch) and Garmin Pay are paving the way. With secure integration into existing mobile wallets and card networks, wearables are set to play a growing role in Latin America’s digital payments ecosystem.

 

 

Instant mobile payments

 

Instant payments are the most popular payment method in Brazil – currently used by 87% of the adult population. Their popularity is also growing in other countries in the region, driven by government-backed systems that are revolutionising transaction speed and cost. Instant payments refer to digital transactions settled in real-time, typically within seconds. Upon initiation of a payment via online or mobile banking, the sender’s bank authenticates the transaction and sends payment instructions to an instant payment network’s central infrastructure. This system validates, clears, and settles the transaction immediately, updating the sender’s and recipient’s accounts without delay. 

 

In 2024 alone, Brazil's PIX, a real-time instant payment system launched by Brazil's Central Bank, processed an astounding 64 billion transactions. By the end of 2027, PIX is projected to surpass credit cards in Brazil, capturing 51% of the market compared to credit cards’ 36%. This highlights consumers’ appetite for instant, low-cost payment options.

 

Instant payments are also growing in popularity across Colombia, with the country’s Pagos Seguros en Línea (PSE) platform gaining momentum in secure online bank transfers. Similarly to its neighbour, Chile’s monetary authority has been imposing interoperability rules to encourage the emergence of instant payment solutions, with local services like Khipu and Mach gaining popularity. 

 

Furthermore, according to a 2025 report by Central Bank in Argentina, instant push transfer grew by 19.6% year-on-year while instant pull transfers reached a total of 39.5 million. Mexico's Sistema de Pagos Electrónicos Interbancarios (SPEI) continues serving as the backbone for real-time transfers alongside newer solutions emerging across the region. 

 

 

QR codes 

 

QR code payments have emerged as a great democratiser of digital payments in Latin America, requiring nothing more than a phone and internet connection. 

 

Customers pay by scanning a QR code with their phone. The QR code encodes payment details such as the recipient’s account credentials and payment amount. Upon scanning, the customer’s payment app or digital wallet decodes the information and directs the user to a secure payment gateway. The user then authorises the payment using their preferred method, such as a linked credit/debit card or bank account. 

 

Brazil leads this transformation, with nearly 30% of PIX transactions initiated by QR codes. Meanwhile, Colombia is actively building its infrastructure, with fintechs like Nequi experimenting with QR codes while the government finalises broader support schemes for nationwide implementation. Mexico's government-backed CoDi platform also offers QR-based instant payments with strong institutional support, though consumer adoption has been slower than the explosive growth seen in Brazil.

By the end of 2027, PIX is projected to surpass credit cards in Brazil, capturing 51% of the market compared to credit cards’ 36%. This highlights consumers’ appetite for instant, low-cost payment options.

 

From adoption to integration: The infrastructure challenge

 

As mobile internet usage grows, accepting digital payments has become essential for businesses. 

 

The region’s diverse payment preferences have traditionally required different technical integrations for each market, creating costly fragmentation. However, this challenge sparked a wave of infrastructure development designed to address the challenge for merchants. 

 

Getnet created its SEP (Single Entry Point) system – a unified platform that transforms complexity into simplicity. Instead of managing separate integrations for each country's preferred payment methods, businesses can now accept everything from Brazil's PIX to Argentina's Mercado Pago through a single technical integration spanning Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Mexico and Uruguay.

 

 

A digital-first future

 

Latin America’s mobile payment revolution has transformed how an entire region conducts commerce. What began as a response to limited banking infrastructure has evolved into a competitive advantage, positioning Latin America at the forefront of global payment innovation.

 

The question for Latin American businesses isn’t whether mobile payments will become widespread – they already have. Digital wallets, instant payments, and QR codes have evolved to become the standard way to paying, embraced by millions who have moved beyond cash. Therefore, merchants across the region need to ensure they’re set up to accept these new ways to pay. 

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