How to Get a Crypto Exchange License in Latin America
Table of Contents
- Why Latin America Is the Next Frontier for Crypto Exchanges
- Regional Crypto Adoption Overview
- Brazil: The Largest Market with a Maturing Framework
- Mexico: Structured Regulation Under Ley Fintech
- Argentina: Inflation-Driven Demand Meets Evolving Regulation
- Colombia: The Financial Sandbox Approach
- Chile: The Fintech Law of 2023
- El Salvador: Bitcoin Law and Special Considerations
- Regional Challenges Every Operator Must Navigate
- Payment Infrastructure Across Latin America
- The Market Opportunity in Numbers
- Localization: More Than Just Translation
- Recommended Approach for Entering Latin America
- The Bottom Line
Why Latin America Is the Next Frontier for Crypto Exchanges
If you are looking for the next high-growth region to launch a crypto exchange, Latin America should be at the top of your list. While most operators have been focused on the EU, Dubai, and Southeast Asia, LatAm has quietly become one of the most active crypto markets in the world.
The numbers tell the story. Latin America has over 400 million internet users, crypto adoption rates that rival or exceed those in developed markets, and a population that has real, practical reasons to use digital assets beyond speculation. When your national currency loses 100% of its value in a single year — as has happened in Argentina — stablecoins are not a speculative bet. They are a survival tool.
But here is the part most people get wrong: they assume that high adoption and urgent demand mean regulation is lax or nonexistent. That was true five years ago. It is not true today. Brazil, Mexico, Chile, and Colombia have all enacted comprehensive crypto or fintech legislation. Argentina is rapidly building its regulatory framework. Even El Salvador, often dismissed as a Bitcoin novelty, has a structured licensing regime.
The window for entering LatAm as a licensed, compliant operator is right now. The regulatory frameworks exist, the market demand is enormous, and competition — while growing — has not yet consolidated around dominant players in most countries. If you have the right crypto exchange software and a willingness to navigate country-specific regulation, this region offers one of the best risk-to-reward ratios in the global exchange landscape.
This guide covers what you actually need to know. Country by country, I will walk you through the licensing requirements, costs, timelines, and practical realities of operating a crypto exchange in Latin America.
For a broader overview of global licensing, see our complete crypto exchange license guide. This article goes deep on LatAm specifically.
Regional Crypto Adoption Overview
Before we get into the regulatory details, it helps to understand why Latin America is different from other emerging crypto markets.
El Salvador made history. In September 2021, El Salvador became the first country in the world to adopt Bitcoin as legal tender alongside the US dollar. While the Chivo wallet rollout had mixed results, the move put the entire region on the global crypto map and sparked serious regulatory conversations across every LatAm government.
Brazil built a framework. Brazil passed the Marco Legal das Criptomoedas (Crypto Legal Framework) in December 2022, which came into full effect in 2023. The Banco Central do Brasil was designated as the primary regulator for crypto assets, and Brazil is now building one of the most comprehensive VASP (Virtual Asset Service Provider) registration systems in the Americas.
Argentina’s inflation created organic demand. With annual inflation regularly exceeding 100% and strict capital controls limiting access to US dollars, Argentinians turned to crypto — especially USDT and USDC — as a practical store of value. This is not speculative trading. This is people protecting their savings. Argentina consistently ranks among the top 15 countries globally for crypto adoption.
Mexico regulated early. Mexico’s Ley Fintech (Fintech Law), enacted in 2018, was one of the first comprehensive fintech regulatory frameworks in the world. It brought crypto exchanges under the oversight of the CNBV (National Banking and Securities Commission) and established clear rules for operation — including a notable restriction on using crypto as payment.
Colombia and Chile followed. Colombia has used a financial sandbox model to gradually bring crypto operators into the regulated fold, while Chile enacted its own Fintech Law in 2023, creating a licensing pathway for crypto service providers.
The common thread across all these countries is movement toward regulation, not away from it. Operators who enter now with a compliance-first mindset will have a significant advantage over those who try to retrofit compliance later.
Brazil: The Largest Market with a Maturing Framework
Brazil is the single largest crypto market in Latin America and the gateway jurisdiction for most operators entering the region. With 215 million people, a sophisticated financial system, and a government that has embraced digital payments (PIX processes over 3 billion transactions per month), Brazil offers the combination of market size and regulatory clarity that makes it the obvious first stop.
The Marco Legal das Criptomoedas
Brazil’s crypto legal framework, Law No. 14,478/2022, established the foundational rules for virtual asset service providers. Key provisions include:
- Banco Central do Brasil (BCB) was designated as the primary regulatory authority for crypto asset businesses
- VASP registration is required for any entity providing crypto exchange, custody, transfer, or brokerage services to Brazilian residents
- Anti-fraud provisions with criminal penalties for crypto-related fraud, including imprisonment of 2-6 years plus fines
- Segregation of client assets from the operator’s own assets
- Compliance with existing AML/CFT legislation under COAF (Brazil’s financial intelligence unit) reporting requirements
What Registration Looks Like
To operate as a registered VASP in Brazil, you need:
- A Brazilian legal entity (typically an LTDA or S/A corporation)
- Directors who meet fit-and-proper requirements with clean criminal records
- Demonstrable AML/CFT policies and procedures
- A designated compliance officer with relevant qualifications
- Technology infrastructure that meets BCB security standards
- Customer complaint resolution mechanisms
- Capital adequacy proportional to your operational scope
The BCB has been issuing detailed normative instructions that flesh out these requirements. The registration process currently takes 3-6 months, though this timeline has been shortening as the BCB builds internal capacity.
Drex and CBDC Implications
One development that smart operators are watching closely is Drex, Brazil’s central bank digital currency. Currently in advanced pilot stages, Drex is built on a permissioned DLT (distributed ledger technology) network and is designed to coexist with PIX for real-time payments.
For exchange operators, Drex creates both opportunity and complexity. On the opportunity side, it signals that Brazil’s financial system is moving toward digital asset infrastructure at the central bank level. On the complexity side, exchanges that want to integrate Drex functionality may need additional authorizations beyond standard VASP registration.
Practical Considerations
Costs: Total setup costs for a Brazilian VASP registration, including entity formation, legal counsel, compliance infrastructure, and initial capital, typically range from $80,000 to $200,000 USD. Ongoing compliance costs run $3,000-$8,000 per month.
Banking: Brazilian banks have become significantly more crypto-friendly since the Marco Legal passed. Established VASPs can open business accounts with mid-tier and some major banks, though relationship-building is still necessary.
Tax: Brazil imposes a 15% capital gains tax on crypto transactions exceeding R$35,000 (~$7,000 USD) per month. Exchanges must provide transaction data to the Receita Federal (tax authority) for transactions above this threshold.
A robust KYC/AML system is non-negotiable for Brazilian operations. The BCB takes identity verification and transaction monitoring seriously, and enforcement actions against non-compliant operators have been increasing.
Mexico: Structured Regulation Under Ley Fintech
Mexico was ahead of the curve. Its Ley Fintech, enacted in March 2018, was among the first comprehensive regulatory frameworks for fintech companies anywhere in the world. For crypto exchange operators, Mexico offers a defined — if somewhat restrictive — regulatory pathway in a market of 130 million people.
The CNBV Registration Process
The Comision Nacional Bancaria y de Valores (CNBV) oversees crypto exchange operations in Mexico. To operate legally, you need:
- CNBV authorization as an Institucion de Tecnologia Financiera (ITF) — specifically, an institution operating with virtual assets
- Minimum capital requirements that vary based on the scope of operations
- A Mexican legal entity with at least one director who is a Mexican resident
- AML/CFT compliance program aligned with Mexico’s Ley Federal para la Prevencion e Identificacion de Operaciones con Recursos de Procedencia Ilicita
- Technology and cybersecurity standards as specified by the CNBV
- Banco de Mexico approval for each virtual asset you plan to list (this is a significant bottleneck)
The Crypto-as-Payment Restriction
Here is the part that catches most operators off guard: Mexico’s regulatory framework explicitly prohibits financial institutions and licensed fintech companies from using cryptocurrencies as legal tender or as a means of payment. You can operate an exchange where users buy, sell, and trade crypto. But you cannot offer crypto payment services within the regulated financial system.
This restriction means that payment gateway functionality for crypto-to-merchant payments is not viable under the current Mexican regulatory framework. Operators focused on exchange and trading services are unaffected, but those planning to offer payment solutions should be aware of this limitation.
The Banco de Mexico Bottleneck
Perhaps the most unique aspect of Mexico’s crypto regulation is that Banco de Mexico (Banxico) must approve each virtual asset that licensed exchanges can offer. In practice, this has meant a very limited list of approved assets. Bitcoin and Ether have been approved, but the process for adding new tokens is slow and uncertain.
This creates an interesting strategic consideration. Licensed Mexican exchanges operate with a limited asset roster, which means that P2P exchange models — where users trade directly without the exchange taking custody — have gained significant traction in Mexico as a complement to licensed exchange operations.
Practical Considerations
Costs: CNBV authorization is more expensive than Brazilian registration. Total costs including legal, compliance setup, and capital requirements typically run $120,000-$300,000 USD. The process takes 6-12 months.
SPEI integration: SPEI (Sistema de Pagos Electronicos Interbancarios) is Mexico’s real-time payment system and is essential for fiat on-ramps. Integrating SPEI requires banking relationships, which in turn require your CNBV authorization.
Competition: Mexico has several established licensed exchanges including Bitso, which has a dominant market position. New entrants need a clear differentiation strategy.
Argentina: Inflation-Driven Demand Meets Evolving Regulation
Argentina is the most fascinating crypto market in Latin America. Nowhere else in the region is the gap between user demand and regulatory infrastructure as pronounced. Argentinians have some of the highest crypto adoption rates in the world — driven by entirely rational economic behavior — while the regulatory framework is still catching up to market reality.
Why Argentina Matters
The numbers are striking. With annual inflation that has exceeded 100% in recent years and strict capital controls (the so-called “cepo cambiario”) that limit citizens’ ability to buy US dollars, Argentinians have turned to crypto in enormous numbers. Stablecoin usage in Argentina is not a tech trend. It is a financial necessity.
The practical use case is straightforward: a worker receives their salary in pesos, immediately converts a portion to USDT or USDC via a local exchange or P2P platform, and holds stablecoins as a store of value against peso devaluation. This pattern has made Argentina one of the top stablecoin markets globally by volume relative to GDP.
CNV Regulation
The Comision Nacional de Valores (CNV), Argentina’s securities regulator, has been gradually asserting authority over crypto markets. Key regulatory developments include:
- CNV General Resolution 994/2023 brought VASPs under reporting obligations and established a registration requirement
- VASP registration with the CNV for entities providing crypto exchange, custody, or transfer services
- UIF (Unidad de Informacion Financiera) compliance for AML/CFT reporting — Argentina’s financial intelligence unit takes this seriously
- Information sharing requirements with the AFIP (tax authority) for transaction data above certain thresholds
Capital Controls and Crypto
Argentina’s capital controls create a unique dynamic for exchange operators. The official exchange rate for the peso and the parallel (“blue dollar”) market rate can diverge by 30-50% or more. Crypto — particularly stablecoins — effectively functions as a parallel dollar market.
Regulators are aware of this dynamic. Operating a crypto exchange in Argentina requires careful navigation of both crypto-specific regulations and broader capital control laws. Legal counsel with specific expertise in Argentine foreign exchange regulation is essential. Getting this wrong can result in severe penalties.
Practical Considerations
Costs: Regulatory entry costs in Argentina are lower than Brazil or Mexico, typically $40,000-$100,000 USD for registration and compliance setup. However, the macroeconomic volatility adds operational complexity that increases ongoing costs.
Banking: Banking access for crypto businesses in Argentina remains challenging. Many operators use a combination of traditional banking relationships and fintech payment partners to handle fiat flows.
Demand: The sheer organic demand for crypto services in Argentina means that user acquisition costs are among the lowest in the world. People are actively looking for crypto on-ramps. If you offer a compliant, user-friendly platform, they will find you.
For operators considering Argentina, a well-designed P2P exchange component can be particularly effective, as P2P trading is already deeply embedded in Argentine crypto culture.
Colombia: The Financial Sandbox Approach
Colombia has taken a pragmatic, incremental approach to crypto regulation through its financial sandbox model. Rather than enacting sweeping crypto legislation all at once, Colombia’s Superintendencia Financiera (SFC) has allowed crypto businesses to operate within supervised sandboxes while the government develops permanent regulatory frameworks.
How the Sandbox Works
The SFC’s financial sandbox (Sandbox Regulatorio) allows crypto companies to operate under temporary, supervised conditions. Participating companies can:
- Offer crypto exchange and custody services to Colombian users
- Partner with regulated financial institutions for fiat integration
- Operate under relaxed (but not absent) regulatory requirements while demonstrating compliance capability
Several exchanges have operated through the sandbox, including partnerships between crypto platforms and Colombian banks like Bancolombia and Davivienda.
Moving Toward Permanent Regulation
Colombia has been working on permanent crypto legislation, building on lessons from the sandbox experience. The expected framework will likely include:
- Formal VASP registration with the SFC
- AML/CFT compliance requirements aligned with FATF recommendations
- Consumer protection provisions
- Tax reporting obligations coordinated with the DIAN (Colombia’s tax authority)
Practical Considerations
Market size: Colombia has 52 million people and a growing digital economy. Crypto adoption has been strong, particularly in urban centers like Bogota, Medellin, and Cali.
Costs: Sandbox participation costs are relatively low — typically $30,000-$80,000 USD for initial setup. Permanent licensing costs will likely increase once the full regulatory framework is enacted.
Remittances: Colombia is a major remittance-receiving country. Crypto-powered remittance services have significant potential here, making it a strong market for operators who combine exchange functionality with cross-border transfer capabilities.
Chile: The Fintech Law of 2023
Chile enacted its Fintech Law (Ley Fintec, Law No. 21,521) in 2023, creating a structured regulatory framework for fintech companies including crypto service providers. The Comision para el Mercado Financiero (CMF) was designated as the primary regulator.
Key Requirements
- CMF registration for entities providing crypto intermediation, custody, or exchange services
- Capital requirements proportional to the scope of services offered
- Technology and cybersecurity standards specified by the CMF
- AML/CFT compliance under UAF (Unidad de Analisis Financiero) reporting requirements
- Consumer protection provisions including transparent fee disclosure and complaint handling
Practical Considerations
Market characteristics: Chile has 19 million people, but one of the highest GDP per capita in Latin America. The crypto market skews toward more sophisticated users, with higher average transaction sizes than in countries like Argentina or Colombia.
Banking: Chile’s banking system has historically been cautious toward crypto businesses. The Fintech Law has improved the situation by providing regulatory clarity, but building banking relationships still requires patience and a demonstrable compliance posture.
Costs: Total entry costs for Chile run $50,000-$150,000 USD, with CMF registration taking 4-8 months.
El Salvador: Bitcoin Law and Special Considerations
El Salvador occupies a unique position in the global crypto landscape. The Bitcoin Law (Ley Bitcoin), enacted in June 2021, made Bitcoin legal tender alongside the US dollar, making El Salvador the first country to take this step.
The Regulatory Framework
El Salvador created the Comision Nacional de Activos Digitales (CNAD) as the dedicated regulator for digital asset services. The licensing framework includes:
- Digital Assets Service Provider (DASP) license for exchanges, custodians, and other crypto service providers
- Compliance with AML/CFT requirements as stipulated by the CNAD
- Capital requirements that are modest compared to larger jurisdictions
- Reporting obligations to the CNAD and tax authorities
Strategic Considerations
The honest assessment of El Salvador is that it is a better base of operations than a primary market. With a population of only 6.5 million, the domestic market is small. However, El Salvador offers several advantages as a regional hub:
- Regulatory friendliness toward crypto businesses, with a government that actively promotes digital asset innovation
- Dollar-denominated economy, which simplifies certain operational aspects
- Lower operating costs compared to jurisdictions like Brazil or Mexico
- Signal value — being licensed in the world’s first Bitcoin legal tender country carries marketing weight
The main risk is reputational. Some institutional partners and banking relationships view El Salvador’s crypto embrace with skepticism. If your target market is institutional traders or you need Tier 1 banking relationships, leading with an El Salvador license may not send the right signal.
Regional Challenges Every Operator Must Navigate
Beyond country-specific requirements, there are several challenges that apply across the entire Latin American region.
Banking Access
Banking access is the single biggest operational challenge for crypto exchanges in Latin America. While regulation has improved the situation, many traditional banks remain cautious about crypto businesses. Strategies that work:
- Apply for banking relationships only after obtaining regulatory authorization
- Work with fintech-friendly banks and digital banks that are more open to crypto clients
- Maintain multiple banking relationships to avoid single points of failure
- Be prepared for higher banking fees and more restrictive account terms than non-crypto businesses face
Currency Controls
Several LatAm countries impose capital controls or foreign exchange restrictions that directly impact crypto exchange operations. Argentina’s cepo cambiario is the most well-known, but Brazil, Colombia, and others have regulations governing foreign currency flows that interact with crypto transactions in complex ways.
You need legal counsel who understands both crypto regulation and foreign exchange law in each country. These are usually different specialists, and you need both.
Compliance Complexity
Operating across multiple LatAm jurisdictions means managing multiple regulatory relationships, multiple reporting requirements, and multiple compliance standards simultaneously. There is no equivalent of the EU’s MiCA passporting here. Each country is its own regulatory universe.
This is where having a solid compliance foundation from day one pays off. If your core compliance infrastructure — KYC/AML, transaction monitoring, reporting — is modular and configurable, expanding into additional countries is a configuration exercise rather than a rebuild.
Regulatory Uncertainty
While the trend across Latin America is toward clearer regulation, the pace of change varies significantly. New administrations can shift regulatory priorities. Enforcement patterns can change with leadership changes at regulatory agencies. Building relationships with regulators and staying engaged with industry associations in each country helps you anticipate and adapt to changes.
Payment Infrastructure Across Latin America
Your exchange is only as good as its fiat on-ramps and off-ramps. In Latin America, payment infrastructure varies dramatically by country, and getting it right is critical for user acquisition.
Brazil: PIX Is Everything
PIX, launched by the Banco Central do Brasil in November 2020, has become one of the most successful instant payment systems in the world. Over 150 million Brazilians use PIX, and it processes more than 3 billion transactions per month. For a crypto exchange operating in Brazil, PIX integration is not optional. It is the primary way users will deposit and withdraw BRL.
PIX operates 24/7 with instant settlement, zero cost for individuals, and near-zero cost for businesses. This makes fiat on-ramps in Brazil significantly smoother than in most other markets.
Mexico: SPEI and CoDi
SPEI (Sistema de Pagos Electronicos Interbancarios) is Mexico’s real-time gross settlement system and the standard for bank-to-bank transfers. CoDi (Cobro Digital) is a QR-code-based payment layer built on top of SPEI. Both are essential for Mexican exchange operations.
SPEI transfers are typically processed within seconds during business hours and within minutes outside business hours. Integration requires a banking relationship and CNBV authorization.
Argentina: Fragmented but High-Volume
Argentina’s payment landscape is more fragmented. Key channels include:
- Transferencias bancarias (bank transfers) via CBU/CVU identifiers
- Mercado Pago — the dominant digital wallet with tens of millions of users
- Ualá, Naranja X, and other fintech wallets that have gained significant market share
- Cash deposits at payment networks like Rapipago and Pago Facil
Supporting multiple payment channels in Argentina is important because user preferences vary significantly by demographic and region.
Other Markets
Colombia uses PSE (Pagos Seguros en Linea) for online bank transfers and has growing mobile payment adoption through apps like Nequi and Daviplata. Chile uses TEF (Transferencia Electronica de Fondos) for bank transfers. Each market has its own payment ecosystem that you need to understand and integrate with.
The Market Opportunity in Numbers
Let me put the Latin American crypto opportunity in perspective with concrete figures:
Population: Over 660 million people across the region, with more than 400 million internet users. Brazil (215M), Mexico (130M), Colombia (52M), and Argentina (46M) are the largest markets.
Crypto adoption: Chainalysis has consistently ranked multiple LatAm countries in the top 20 globally for crypto adoption. Brazil typically ranks in the top 10. Argentina, Colombia, and Mexico are all in the top 20. Some estimates put crypto adoption above 20% of the adult population in Argentina and Brazil.
Stablecoin usage: Latin America accounts for a disproportionate share of global stablecoin volume relative to its GDP. In Argentina and Venezuela, stablecoins are used as practical alternatives to devaluing local currencies, not just for trading.
Remittances: Latin America receives over $150 billion in annual remittances, with Mexico alone receiving $60+ billion. Crypto-powered remittance rails can offer significant cost savings over traditional services like Western Union, creating a built-in use case for exchange operators.
Growth trajectory: The LatAm crypto market has been growing at 30-40% year over year, outpacing more mature markets in North America and Europe. This growth is driven by fundamental economic factors — inflation, currency devaluation, capital controls, remittance needs — that are not going away anytime soon.
For operators with the right technology stack and regulatory approach, LatAm represents an opportunity to capture market share in a region that is still in relatively early innings compared to the US, EU, or East Asian markets.
Localization: More Than Just Translation
A common mistake operators make when entering Latin America is treating localization as a translation exercise. It is not. Spanish and Portuguese are the two primary languages, but the differences go much deeper than language.
Language nuances: Brazilian Portuguese is not European Portuguese. Mexican Spanish is not Argentine Spanish. Financial and crypto terminology varies significantly across countries. “Billetera” (wallet) is standard in most Spanish-speaking countries, but the specific terms for exchange functions, order types, and financial products vary. If your interface reads like it was translated by someone who speaks Castilian Spanish and has never lived in Latin America, your users will notice.
UX expectations: Latin American users often expect different UX patterns than North American or European users. WhatsApp-based customer support is nearly mandatory in Brazil and most Spanish-speaking markets. Dark mode preferences, mobile-first behavior, and payment flow expectations all have regional characteristics.
Trust signals: What builds trust varies by market. In Brazil, association with regulated financial institutions and BCB oversight is a strong trust signal. In Argentina, peer recommendations through crypto community Telegram and Discord groups carry enormous weight. In Mexico, CNBV authorization is a baseline expectation for serious traders.
Customer support: Offering customer support in the local language with representatives who understand local financial systems and cultural context is essential. An English-only support team handling Brazilian or Argentine users will result in poor retention.
Recommended Approach for Entering Latin America
Based on what we have seen work for exchange operators entering the LatAm market, here is a practical framework:
Phase 1: Start with Brazil or Mexico (Months 1-6)
Pick one of the two largest markets as your entry point. Brazil is the better choice if you are optimizing for market size and payment infrastructure (PIX makes fiat integration smooth). Mexico is better if you need a market that is culturally closer to the broader Spanish-speaking region and want to expand from there.
- Form your local legal entity
- Begin the regulatory registration process
- Integrate local payment infrastructure (PIX for Brazil, SPEI for Mexico)
- Localize your platform for the target market
- Deploy your crypto exchange software with local compliance configurations
Phase 2: Expand to Two or Three Additional Markets (Months 6-12)
Once your first market is operational, expand to Argentina (high demand, lower entry barriers) and Colombia or Chile (growing markets with defined regulatory paths).
- Leverage your core compliance infrastructure across markets
- Adapt KYC flows for each country’s document types and verification requirements
- Add local payment method integrations for each new market
- Hire local compliance officers or engage local compliance consultants
Phase 3: Regional Coverage (Months 12-18)
With three or four markets operational, you have a regional platform. At this stage:
- Consider adding El Salvador as a hub or marketing base
- Evaluate smaller markets like Peru, Ecuador, and Uruguay
- Build cross-border functionality (crypto remittances between LatAm countries)
- Develop regional brand recognition through localized content marketing
Technology Requirements
Your technology platform needs to support:
- Multi-jurisdiction compliance with configurable KYC/AML rules per country
- Multiple payment integrations for each market’s payment ecosystem
- Multi-currency support for BRL, MXN, ARS, COP, CLP, and USD
- Localized interfaces in Brazilian Portuguese and Latin American Spanish (at minimum)
- Mobile-first design — mobile usage in LatAm exceeds desktop by a significant margin
If you are evaluating platforms, make sure your crypto exchange software can handle this multi-market complexity from day one. Retrofitting multi-jurisdiction support into a platform built for a single market is painful and expensive.
Getting your regulatory and operational foundation right from the start is critical. Our guide on how to start a crypto exchange covers the broader operational considerations that apply regardless of jurisdiction.
The Bottom Line
Latin America is not the easiest region to enter from a regulatory perspective. There is no single license that covers the whole region. Banking relationships take work. Each country has its own rules, its own payment infrastructure, and its own market dynamics.
But the opportunity is enormous. Over 400 million internet users, some of the highest crypto adoption rates in the world, and fundamental economic drivers — inflation, currency devaluation, capital controls, remittance needs — that create genuine demand for crypto services. This is not a speculative market hoping for the next bull run. This is a market where people need what crypto exchanges provide.
The operators who will win in Latin America are the ones who treat compliance as a competitive advantage, invest in proper localization, and build for multi-market operations from the start. If that sounds like your approach, the LatAm market is ready for you.
Ready to launch your exchange in Latin America? Codono’s crypto exchange software supports multi-jurisdiction deployment with configurable compliance, integrated payment gateways, and localization tools built for the LatAm market. Get started today.