21 de August de 2025
While the U.S. is still scaling FedNow, Brazil has already turned PIX into a mass-market infrastructure for instant payments. Fast, low-cost, and universal, PIX processed over USD 5 trillion in 2024, quickly becoming Brazil’s most popular payment method.
What makes PIX unique is not just its adoption curve, but its public design. Unlike many instant payment systems that emerged from private initiatives or bank consortia, PIX was conceived, regulated, and operated by the Central Bank of Brazil. This centralized governance enabled rapid penetration across consumers, businesses, and government.
Key achievements include:
No wonder institutions like the IMF, World Bank, and BIS cite PIX as one of the most inclusive and scalable real-time payment infrastructures worldwide.
PIX has disrupted Brazil’s payment ecosystem in ways the U.S. market is now watching closely. Traditionally, card acquirers and POS machine providers (the Brazilian equivalents of Visa, Mastercard, and Square/Block’s merchant services) controlled merchant payments. PIX rewrote this equation by enabling direct account-to-account transfers, bypassing costly intermediaries.
Impacts included:
For U.S. readers, this dynamic mirrors debates around whether FedNow or real-time payments could eventually challenge card networks’ dominance. Especially in low-value, everyday transactions.
PIX’s rise has even entered the geopolitical arena. In July 2025, the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) launched a Section 301 investigation into Brazil’s digital trade policies, citing PIX as a potential state-backed advantage that could disadvantage American firms. The move came amid broader trade disputes, with tariffs against Brazilian exports on the table.
Brazil defended PIX as a neutral, open system accessible to any company, domestic or foreign. Still, the case highlighted how instant payment systems are no longer just financial infrastructure; they are becoming strategic assets, shaping debates on digital sovereignty, fair trade, and economic power.
For U.S. policymakers, instant payments are not only about efficiency; they are about influence and competitiveness in the global digital economy.
PIX continues to evolve beyond basic payments, becoming a platform for embedded financial services:
These innovations demonstrate how PIX is transitioning from a rail to an operating system for financial services, raising the question: Could FedNow follow a similar path?
Brazil is not alone. Other economies are building instant payment systems, but their trajectories vary:
For Brazil, PIX has been transformational:
The global race toward instant payments is no longer about if, but how. The key challenges ahead include:
PIX proves that public policy plus platform engineering can redefine cost, speed, and access in financial systems. Its rise has forced traditional intermediaries to adapt, influenced U.S.–Brazil trade disputes, and inspired other nations to rethink their payment architectures.
For the United States, the PIX story offers two lessons:
At Luby, we partner with financial institutions and fintechs across the Americas to turn this potential into impact, helping organizations accelerate digital strategies with secure, scalable, and innovative payment solutions.
Beyond theory, we’ve already proven this expertise in practice. Together with Online IPS, we developed an international PIX payment gateway designed to extend Brazil’s innovation beyond its borders. By combining deep knowledge of financial systems with scalable architecture and robust APIs, our teams enabled seamless PIX transactions for businesses outside Brazil. This case demonstrates how PIX-inspired infrastructure can be successfully adapted for the U.S. market, reinforcing Luby’s role as a trusted partner in accelerating the evolution of payment ecosystems worldwide.