In Brazil, startups are no longer built around financial limitations; they are built on top of a strong financial infrastructure. What differentiates Brazil is not just market size, but the depth and maturity of its financial infrastructure, now robust enough to support rapid, large-scale innovation.
The numbers reflect this shift. Brazil has over 160 million internet users and more than 220 million active smartphones, creating one of the largest digital consumer bases in the world. In parallel, the country’s fintech sector has grown to 1,400+ companies, while venture capital investment consistently positions Brazil as the top destination in Latin America, often capturing 40–50% of total regional funding in recent years.
At the center of this transformation is Pix, the instant payment system launched by the Central Bank in 2020. Its adoption has been unprecedented: over 160 million users and more than 4 billion transactions per month as of 2025. Pix now accounts for a significant share of all electronic payments in Brazil, surpassing traditional methods in frequency. For startups, this means operating in a market where instant, low-cost payments are already embedded in daily behavior.
This level of infrastructure fundamentally changes how businesses are designed. In many Latin American markets, startups still need to navigate fragmented payment ecosystems, combining card processors, cash-based methods, and local bank transfers with varying levels of reliability. In Brazil, however, solutions like Pix and a more integrated financial system allow startups to build directly on top of widely adopted infrastructure from day one.
The result is faster go-to-market, lower operational complexity, and the ability to focus on product differentiation rather than financial plumbing.
“Brazil is one of the few markets where financial infrastructure has reached a level of maturity that directly accelerates startup growth,” says Dmytro Rukin, CEO of LaFinteca. “When payments, identity, and banking systems are already digitized and widely adopted, companies can scale in months instead of years.”
This environment is also enabling new business models. In Brazil, embedded finance is moving beyond early adoption into a core growth layer: the market is projected to reach over $18 billion by 2030, with consistent growth driven by payments, lending, and platform-based financial services.
Infrastructure providers like LaFinteca play a strategic role in this shift by connecting startups to local payment methods and financial systems, not only in Brazil but across Latin America. As more companies expand regionally, the ability to replicate performance and user experience across different markets becomes a key growth factor.
Looking forward, Brazil’s trajectory suggests that fintech will continue to shape how startups emerge and scale. With continued regulatory support, widespread digital adoption, and constant innovation in financial services, the country is setting the foundation for a more integrated and scalable startup ecosystem.
In this context, the next wave of startups in Brazil will be defined not just by digital-first models, but by how effectively they leverage financial infrastructure as a core component of their growth strategy. Between now and 2030, as instant payments, open finance, and embedded financial services continue to expand, infrastructure will increasingly determine which companies are able to scale, and which are not.