dbolgheroni 15 hours ago

People underestimate how difficult it was to transfer money before Pix, even between local banks. The process was hard to use, it could take days and the fees were huge, depending on your bank. Pix solved all these problems.

What happens also is that many sellers provide discounts when using Pix, because you dodge the expensive fees charged not only by Visa and MasterCard, but the fees operators (banks, fintechs) charge to provide the infrastructure (PoS machines, financing for installments, etc, the last one being quite common in the country) to use these networks.

  • protastus 14 hours ago

    I think we need to put this in context for folks who are not from Brazil.

    Comparatively, a domestic bank wire in Brazil before Pix was already easier and faster than one in the US today. I don't recall the bank fees being bad either.

    The issue is that bank wires were never designed for buying lunch at the food court. They're not instant and not user friendly to set up.

    Pix is alien technology next to the stuff we have in the US.

    • Freak_NL 14 hours ago

      It sounds a bit like the Dutch Tikkie with the QR codes and instant transfer. Of course, in the EU most bank wires are already free when using SEPA, and often nearly instant as well. This Tikkie thing is a way to easily create a payment request for people who can't be arsed to simply carry cash (and raise the country's resilience to system failure in the process).

      • iurisilvio 14 hours ago

        Brazilian living in NL, experienced in both. I think biggest difference is Tikkie doesn't give you an easy identifier. Great for privacy, but being able to send money to your email/phone number makes a difference for some real time use cases. QR code helps, but it is not the same.

        • usrnm 13 hours ago

          IBAN works pretty ok as an identifier when you need that. Bank transfers between Dutch banks are almost instant anyway

          • kristjank 1 hour ago

            It is instant provided your financial institution works within the SEPA Instant transfer system

            • Sukram21 35 minutes ago

              Since last year, all EU banks have to support SEPA Instant Transfer, both receiving & sending, at the same price as a usual transfer (Instant Payments Regulation 2024/886)

      • dzhiurgis 1 hour ago

        > free when using SEPA, and often nearly instant as well

        It shocks me how well it works sometimes. Literally press pay and move eyeballs to notifications and it's there already.

    • jszymborski 14 hours ago

      Would you say that Pix is comparable to Canada's Interac Debit?

      • protastus 14 hours ago

        Speaking as a non-expert, I think Pix has much bigger scope. Pix is account-to-account. One can buy real estate, pay bills, make person-to-person and business-to-business transactions, government payments, recurring payments. The funds also settle instantly.

        Most people don't experience the full scope of Pix which is impressive.

        • adrithmetiqa 13 hours ago

          The credit card companies really missed the boat here to become the standard for consumer to consumer payments. Of course, from their perspective, they know that people would not accept having to pay for this service so the companies won’t go near it.

        • amarant 7 hours ago

          Sounds like pix is very similar to the Swedish swish. Phone numbers are used for identity, payments are instant, businesses often have qr codes with their identity etc..

          It's like WhatsApp but with money!

          • throwaway473825 3 hours ago

            The Swish system is private, which means that the fees are as high as the market can bear. In many cases cards are cheaper.

            If the e-krona happens, that would be a better comparison.

            • cess11 1 hour ago

              As is the dominant e-ID platform, because our politicians are fond of bank cartels.

              It kind of works and Swish does too, unless they're down which happens every now and then, but there is room for improvement that would be easier realised as a public sector endeavour.

        • jszymborski 6 hours ago

          eInterac is also account to account, but single transaction limits are far too low to transact down payments or even many b2b payments.

          People still increasingly pay their rent here via eInterac.

        • vitorgrs 3 hours ago

          e.g you can subscribe monthly to ChatGPT or Amazon Prime using Pix. It's called "Automatic Pix".

    • johnea 13 hours ago

      The entire problem solved by Pix is an artificially created obstacle put in place so banks can charge for something they do for free.

      The article doesn't mention China's digital renminbi, but it is similar, including the aspect of being offered by the country's central bank.

      Rather than this looking like "Alien tech" in the US, it's just another example of things in the US looking more like stone age tech to the rest of the world.

      Like banned chinese EVs, and a pushback on solar electricity generation, all of these are manifestations of the US government primarily making it easier for multi-billion $$ multi-national corpses to filch the general population.

      This isn't just the orange cheato, it's been the policy of every modern US administration, with the backing of the majority of the legislature.

      And for some reason, the plurality of voters seem to be in favor.

    • madaxe_again 3 hours ago

      Pix is ok - but it’s clunky to use and has a single point of failure.

      On the former - paying is:

        Unlock phone
        Launch app
        Authenticate
        Choose to pay with pix
        Scan QR code
        Enter amount
        Authenticate again
        Wait
        Payment made
        Show cashier your phone
      

      Which is considerably more involved than a contactless payment.

      On the single point of failure side of things - I was at an event in Brasilia a month or so back, pix grinds to a crawl, taking 10+ minutes per transaction, and the drinks queues rapidly got out of hand. As nobody accepts cash any more, and because nobody has a card any more, this meant they sold practically no drinks.

      So it ain’t bad but tbh passing bits of paper back and forth is still easier.

      • martheen 3 hours ago

        Doesn't seem too different from QRIS in Indonesia, authentication is relatively painless since some apps offer either pin or fingerprint. Being open standard (multiple banks, electronic wallet and payment gateways support it, multiple payment apps support it, all interoperable) probably help since there's never any delay I've experienced for years, and this system is handling from small payment on roadside hawkers to electronic purchase in large stores both offline and online.

        More fancy payment flow are also available, such as vendors generating one-time QR code that already include the payment amount, and the user apps generating one-time QR code that the vendor scan, thus switching some of user steps to the vendor.

        In most cities I've lived and visited, using QR is far more convenient than paper. Good luck using contactless when most phones don't support it, and even when Visa & MasterCard pushed their contactless standard, I never encounter a single vendor with a working machine (this range from small shops to large hypermarket). Maybe because they have bigger MDR than QR, but from customers PoV contactless simply don't work, until QRIS also adopt NFC and suddenly it's workable (but not widespread yet since most phones still don't)

      • vitorgrs 3 hours ago

        There's Pix contactless payment. Both Samsung and Google wallet support. Samsung added a few weeks ago. Google added 1 or 2 years ago.

        You can actually pay QR Code Pix now with Samsung by just opening the camera too.

        Apple refuses to implement Pix on Apple Pay, and regulatory agencies are trying to change that...

        Pix integration with Google Pay it's just amazing.

        Imagine the situation in the US as if every app or website magically used Google Pay.

        Well, that's Brazil now if you use Android. Because as soon as you copy a Pix code, it will prompt Google Pay :) And every service in Brazil have Pix... Even international ones as Stripe supports...

        • reese_john 2 hours ago

          USD is a hard currency unlike the BRL. It is not supposed to move that fast by design. Google “Regulation E”. Brazil has no such strong provisions for protecting unauthorized transfers out of your account

          • rickdeckard 1 hour ago

            > USD is a hard currency unlike the BRL

            How much does this matter in the context of paying in BRL, to a BRL merchant, in Brazil?

          • GoblinSlayer 41 minutes ago

            >strong provisions for protecting unauthorized transfers out of your account

            What's with people complaining that they can't terminate transfers out of their accounts?

  • cassianoleal 14 hours ago

    I worked in a bank in Brazil in the early 2000s. Bank transfers were always easy and relatively quick. At worst, transfers would happen overnight during a national event called bank compensation where all banks would sync up with the Central Bank.

    Pix solved a bunch of problems and made all of the above quicker and easier, but Brazil has been at the forefront of banking systems for a long time.

    • augusto-moura 14 hours ago

      We had TED, but it was not instant, nor was it free. It only worked on working hours and took a maximum of 1h, still better than American banks, though. QR Codes is also a big deal.

      The deployment of PIX was also really well executed, if it took too much I'm 100% sure that Visa and Master would've made it worse. Being quick was a wise decision

      • cassianoleal 13 hours ago

        > We had TED, but it was not instant, nor was it free.

        Not instant, but pretty close for the time. It might not have been free but most basic bank packages had a bunch of TED transfers included. For everything else, there was still DOC which would happen overnight and was either free or cheaper than TED.

        I'm not dissing Pix in any way. Pix is probably the most advanced transfers and payments system in the world, and I'm 100% with you on how well it was (and still is) executed.

        I was mostly responding to:

        > how difficult it was to transfer money before Pix, even between local banks.

        It was certainly not.

        I remember being in the UK a couple years after I was on that bank, and being shocked at how primitive everything related to banking was. Transfers would take days or even weeks and would be incredibly awkward to make. Cheques were the quickest way to transfer money between people - other than cash, obviously, but that was not always desired.

        A few years later I visited the US and it was even more retrograde than what I had seen in the UK all those years before.

      • reese_john 6 hours ago

        TED is still very much alive.

        In fact, the BRL amount settled via TED is still higher than Pix, although the gap seems to be closing

      • vitorgrs 3 hours ago

        Several backs had a good amount of TED limit. Although everything changed when Nubank launched, giving unlimited TEDs to everyone. Most banks followed at the time, so basically around 2015~ several big banks had unlimited TEDs.

        The problem with TED it's just how hard it was to send money. You had to insert, if I recall right:

        - Person full name - Social security number - Select the Bank Name - The type of account (savings or checking account) - Agency and account number

        This basically means that TED was used as a serious payment thing, like money you receive from your company, etc.

        A lot of companies still use TED.

    • neves 6 hours ago

      Man, It is perder of magnitude different. I've noticed it when I gave small money for a beggar using pix. It's really revolutionary.

      And remember that credit card fees are greater in Brazil

      • zinekeller 6 hours ago

        I won't dispute you or even cassianoleal, but compared to how was US in 2005 (just barely finishing check/que digitalization), Brazil is indeed faster in this forefront (and it enabled the creation of Pix in the first place).

    • sjtgraham 5 hours ago

      Speaking of the forefront the UK has had interbank realtime payments (Faster Payment) since 2008. It also used to have something like Pix, i.e. bank account referenced by user's phone number called Paym from 2014, until it was discontinued due to lack of demand in 2023. Faster Payments is still operational.

  • orochimaaru 7 hours ago

    Is this similar to India's UPI? Visa and MasterCard exist (and grumble from time to time) but aren't needed.

  • pelasaco 3 hours ago

    > People underestimate how difficult it was to transfer money before Pix, even between local banks.

    The difficulties were the same as everywhere. I worked in Bank in Brazil and in Germany. A lot of the difficulties we still face in Germany today.

  • SomeUserName432 1 hour ago

    > People underestimate how difficult it was to transfer money before Pix, even between local banks. The process was hard to use, it could take days and the fees were huge, depending on your bank. Pix solved all these problems.

    Nearing 17:00 in a bank: Does anyone here need to do a TED or a DOC? Come to attendant now before the system shuts down for the day!

h4kunamata 5 hours ago

Read: The USA does not like what they cannot control!!

I am glad to see the EU following Brazil with its own payment system.

Visa/MasterCard/Paypal era is gone!!

  • raverbashing 4 hours ago

    Yup

    Americans will be "pro free market" until it's somebody else doing the competition, then they will be very butthurt about it (at best)

    • h4kunamata 4 hours ago

      Bullies don't like to be bullied, ahhhh the double standards haha

  • pndy 3 hours ago

    Considering the times we're living in, each country should consider implementing own payment system, and never abandoning cash for digital currency. Both systems should coexist and complement each other but we aren't living in a perfect world.

reese_john 2 hours ago

It is worth noting that despite all this cheap sovereignty talk from Brazil’s president, in practice Brazil would not be able to operate Pix at that scale without heavily relying on American hyperscalers companies.

Brazilian institutions are paying hundreds of millions of dollars to US cloud providers, specially AWS, to be able to process that many transactions.

Earlier this year, when sa-east-1 was down, major banks were forced to suspend Pix payments for nearly 3 hours. When this happens, some people are literally not able to buy anything because that’s their only payment method. So much for “President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva proclaiming a nationwide campaign: “Pix is ours, my friend”.”

Don’t get me wrong, Pix has been a great success and a major achievement, but all this adversarial political talk between the US and Brazil administrations is really cringe, both countries are better doing business together.

[1]https://economia.uol.com.br/noticias/redacao/2026/02/07/falh...

  • DoctorDabadedoo 2 hours ago

    Only reinforces the point that relying on american infrastructure as a critical piece of your stack, in 2026, is a liability.

    • reese_john 2 hours ago

      This is not a real problem outside of niche industries

      American companies are great to do business with.

      Most countries, including Brazil, simply don’t have the capability to pull this on their own. Not enough tech talent nor infrastructure

      • ____mr____ 1 hour ago

        > It is worth noting that despite all this cheap sovereignty talk from Brazil’s president, in practice Brazil would not be able to operate Pix at that scale without heavily relying on American hyperscalers companies.

        > American companies are great to do business with.

        US officials involving themselves in your national market because they are unhappy with the market share of their companies in it, with the implicit threat of stopping other areas of trade if you dont allow the companies to gain a larger market share makes US companies too untrustworthy to do business with. If Trump implements a trade ban for Brazil, will these hyperscalers continue providing the service at their own risk, or are they going to prioritize their state over their customers? I would assume the answer will be the latter. Given that, I believe it is in Brazil's (and most other states) best interest to divest and reduce partnerships with companies operating in the US

      • cess11 1 hour ago

        There are exceptions but the "hyperscalers" and pretty much anything that handles personal information is highly toxic and should be fiercely avoided.

  • propagandist 2 hours ago

    So they get to decide when a transaction is in their national interest and do business on that basis?

    That sounds like "sovereignty" to me. You don't need to be fully protectionist to be sovereign.

    If you have an ax to grind with Lula, just say so.

  • wurstburst 2 hours ago

    Don't get me wrong. But mentioning Brazil's president on this meter just adds even more politics to the discussion. Which global systems don't depend somehow on US infrastructure? Do you have the same opinion about the European leaders that are creating/created cloud infrastructure? I believe just one of the parts is really into adversarial talks lately. Brazil is just following what other countries are also doing.

    • reese_john 2 hours ago

      > But mentioning Brazil's president on this meter just adds even more politics to the discussion.

      This quote is literally from the linked article — he is mentioned there

      > Do you have the same opinion about the European leaders that are creating/created cloud infrastructure?

      I don’t understand the question, I think it’d be great to have an European AWS equivalent just for the sake of competition, but as far as I know, we are very far from that

  • potamic 1 hour ago

    As long as the foreign companies operate within the country under the country's laws, it shouldn't be a big problem. But being dependent on only one vendor and not having redundancy in the system is a problem though. This is why cash is important to provide the ultimate redundancy against all technological and infrastructural failures.

WinstonSmith84 1 hour ago

I can see that Visa and Mastercard are freaking out, not because Pix can take over their business model, but because it can give ideas to other countries doing the same.

I've spent three months earlier this year in Brazil and never used Pix once. Not because I didn't want, but because I couldn't, or let's be honest: my time was not worth the hassle. To be able to pay with Pix, one needs to get a CPF (Brazilian Tax ID). Then to open a bank account, mostly local banks only accept Pix, with which you can tie your CPF. It's possible but it's definitely not straightforward the slightest. All the while Visa and Mastercard work everywhere in the country, I almost never had to pay in cash, even some sellers in the streets accepted regular credit cards.

Pix is certainly great, but locally only, and if every country comes with its own system and Visa or Mastercard disappear, we are going to go back to how people used to travel 50 years ago: with a lot of USD bank notes hidden in your hotel room or elsewhere ...

Pix is a good local idea, but the world needs something better.

  • melting_snow 1 hour ago

    > but because it can give ideas to other countries doing the same

    This is happening right now in Europe. You have systems like Blik, Twint, Swish etc.

    I know that at least Blik is working on making it possible for international payments.

    • ginko 1 hour ago

      What's needed in Europe is federation of the existing systems, not one winner taking it all.

      • nolok 58 minutes ago

        That's exactly what's happening, see the EU digital euro scheme. It's planned to be free of fees too, modeled around how SEPA was done for wires.

        There has been massive resistance by the incumbents of course, including banks (since they too charge a fee on top of visa).

        It's been in the backlog for years but the US sanction against ICC judges leading to them being cut off from most things including payment triggered a renewal of it.

  • someonenice 1 hour ago

    There is India's UPI (launched in 2016), Singapore PayNow (Launched 2017) that works in a similar way. And they also work across each platform.. UPI users in India can transfer to Paynow users in Singapore and vice versa.

    [1] https://www.dbs.com.sg/personal/deposits/pay-with-ease/payno...

    • lmz 1 hour ago

      some UPI users to some Paynow users. (limited to participating institutions only).

    • gmerc 58 minutes ago

      Thailand Promptpay is federated too, as are some Japanese services.

  • SomeUserName432 1 hour ago

    > To be able to pay with Pix, one needs to get a CPF (Brazilian Tax ID).

    There are third party apps you can use to pay with pix using a credit card, can't recall that name, but read about it here a few months back, on another pix-thread.

    > CPF (Brazilian Tax ID). Then to open a bank account

    Getting a CPF is absolutely trivial, but I'm not sure you can open a bank account without RN/RNE, at least not with local banks. Can probably manage with one of the online banks.

  • cess11 58 minutes ago

    "we are going to go back to how people used to travel 50 years ago: with a lot of USD bank notes hidden in your hotel room or elsewhere ..."

    Who did that?

    Most people except for criminals and refugees used traveller's cheques:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traveller%27s_cheque

    I think some banks, like AmEx, still issue them.

sschueller 46 minutes ago

The Swiss nation bank and other central banks should also do something similar. They are loosing control to private foreign corporations which decide what you can and can not purchase. Not based on laws but on risk.

One of the jobs of the SNB is to enable payments. But because most people are using digital payments now they are loosing this ability and control.

If you get sanctioned by the US you loose access to all digital payment systems. In Switzerland where access to a bank account is a right written in the law you can only use one bank (Postfinance) and this bank has to limit you to basically a useless account (No wires, no credit cards etc.) because even the internal digital payment system (Twint) touches some US system.

cloche 13 hours ago

> Since 2022, Mastercard Brazil’s CEO, Marcelo Tangioni, has voiced his concerns: “Pix is great, beneficial for the industry. What’s not great is that it falls under the Central Bank. It can’t regulate and compete at the same time”.

Why not? This is such an American point of view that sounds similar to why the IRS doesn't offer easier tax filing options.

  • surgical_fire 13 hours ago

    This is a free market. All he has to do is offer a better service than the public offering.

    I always hear that the government is inefficient, should be easy no?

    • fmobus 12 hours ago

      Whenever people start arguing about inefficient government they should be reminded that pix costs like 10M USD a year to run. An absolute bargain for what it delivers.

  • matheusmoreira 5 hours ago

    He's got a point though. Pix is a revolutionary system, but it is also a deeply centralized system, at the hands of the brazilian government no less. Pix is already 100% surveilled. With the widespread adoption of pix by the public, some nightmarish scenarios have entered the realm of possibility. I've seen law proposals to criminalize possession of physical cash.

    Not defending credit card companies, just pointing out the fact that there are risks associated with pix that must be considered.

    • Lvl999Noob 5 hours ago

      > Pix is already 100% surveilled

      And Visa and MasterCard aren't surveiled? Isn't one of their selling points that they surveil every transaction and automatically block anything suspicious? And increasingly, the parameters for suspicious include anything pornographic or even 'pornographic' (see: the bullying of steam to remove explicit games).

      At least with Pix, the costs get lower for the end users.

      • matheusmoreira 3 hours ago

        Of course they are. Theirs is a more corporate surveillance, though. I'm genuinely afraid of what the brazilian government can do with this sort of data.

        • pyrale 2 hours ago

          > Theirs is a more corporate surveillance, though.

          The thing about US' corporate suveillance system, and why the US government is so tolerant about it, is that US government branches either buy or are given all the data they need.

          You don't get government surveillance or corporate surveillance, you get government surveillance or government and corporate surveillance.

        • kristjank 1 hour ago

          Third party doctrine means corporate surveillance is state surveillance. And unlike Pix covering just Brazil, CC companies cover the whole world.

      • x-complexity 3 hours ago

        > > Pix is already 100% surveilled

        > And Visa and MasterCard aren't surveiled?

        Who is doing the surveilling is the difference. In the latter, the surveillance is done by the private sector, in aims of better targeted advertising.

        In the former, it's done by either the government or by a government-tied organization, and thus invites a left-hand-passes-to-right-hand scenario, wherein the data & metadata obtained from the system could be passed to law enforcement for prosecution (doubly so if the transactions could be bundled as evidence).

        > Isn't one of their selling points that they surveil every transaction and automatically block anything suspicious? And increasingly, the parameters for suspicious include anything pornographic or even 'pornographic' (see: the bullying of steam to remove explicit games).

        The censorship pressures made onto Visa & Mastercard was done not by the government, but by PACs & non-governmental organizations. It is through the use of "think of the children" that they push them into censoring transactions, under the implicit threat that lawsuits will be filed if such transactions remain allowed.

        • vitorgrs 3 hours ago

          The government already have card transaction access though. If you are in the banking system - you are being tracked. Doesn't matter if is Pix or a card.

          Doesn't mean they will automatically expose you, as it requires justice approval technically...

        • altacc 2 hours ago

          The censorship is a massive issue though as it effectively means that private companies can overrule the law if they effectively monopolize critical infrastructure. Private companies are even less accountable to individuals than governments are when there is no real market choice.

    • c7b 3 hours ago

      Visa/Mastercard are also 100% surveilled. The nightmare of your transactions being monitored and arbitrarily blocked that's peddled as an argument against CBDCs or public financial infrastructure like Pix is already a reality for all of traditional finance (with the exception of physical cash, which happens to also be a central bank product). Sometimes even balances get confiscated, read the horror stories by Stripe customers. Americans seem to believe that the same thing is necessarily worse if it's done in the public sector. Other countries tend to see it differently. Just let them be.

    • jeroenhd 2 hours ago

      > Pix is already 100% surveilled

      Visa and Mastercard are 300% surveilled: once by the Brazilian government, once by the payment providers themselves, and then finally by the American government.

      There are privacy implications of cashless societies, but these foreign companies are worse in every aspect.

    • AnAfrican 19 minutes ago

      Not really.

      All financial institutions are surveilled and regulated. There's a reason Patio 11 describe the industry as an "arm of the government".

      But furthermore, his argument is not about surveillance (which he accepts when he describes the central bank as the regulator) but about the competition.

      It's the very idea of something being provided as a public good that is considered "anormal" and "anti-competitive" here.

pkphilip 4 hours ago

India's UPI is also extremely quick and easy to use - instant transfers with just the person's phone number or via a QR code or via a UPI id which looks like an email id.

We are talking about 19-20 billion transactions per month.

Apart from UPI, there are other interbank transfers methods such as NEFT, IMPS, RTGS etc. All quite convenient and easy to use.

  • dd_xplore 2 hours ago

    In some setups UPI doesn't even internet! Just an SMS is sufficient

    • jeroenhd 2 hours ago

      I can see the usability aspect, but using an insecure protocol like SMS for something like payment sounds like an absolutely awful idea.

      RCS might work as it's a bit more secure (and more importantly: doesn't have a 2G/3G compatible version that criminals might trivially abuse); it even has an optional money sending API in its protocol.

    • someonenice 1 hour ago

      There is UPI wallet (preload your wallet) that require no internet. But this still require a smartphone.

      The SMS option is mainly to avoid requiring a smartphone. There is a huge population that do not have a smartphone.

shpx 14 hours ago

It's surprising that Visa and Mastercard are even private companies. I expected that the government would be in charge of money and not let a group of people impose a 1-3% tax on their population. In the US, credit cards account for "71% of nationwide retail sales dollars".

Governments aren't competent enough to do tech stuff well and they would never make something that works in a different country as well as credit cards do, but still.

  • ronsor 14 hours ago

    Banks are private companies. The Federal Reserve is partially private.

  • rbanffy 14 hours ago

    > a group of people impose a 1-3% tax on their population.

    It seems the consensus is that a taxes are only bad if you have to pay the government. If it's a small set of companies that collectively own a virtual monopoly, it's because they earned it.

    • contingencies 13 hours ago

      Competition is for losers. - Peter Thiel

  • tardedmeme 13 hours ago

    Most countries have some kind of bank wire system that is in charge of the money itself. Cards are pre-authorization system. The movement of money is authorized when you swipe the card, but not actually moved until up to a few days later, through the existing bank wire systems. If there's a currency conversion involved it can be even trickier.

  • nitwit005 9 hours ago

    The US already has a competing payment system for benefits (EBT cards), as do many other countries.

    Payments themselves are not a technical challenge, no matter who's doing it. The fundamentals are trivial. You move numbers between accounts.

    It's tackling fraud and dealing with disputes that's a challenge.

    • hakfoo 6 hours ago

      The hardest part is network effects.

      Consider that the largest payment card network on Earth (China UnionPay, 7 billion cards) - decided it was easier just to bootstrap acceptance in the US by a partnership with Discover rather than connecting directly to merchants.

      If you want a new scheme to work, distribute something like social security and welfare cheques through it. That immediately forces broad acceptance.

    • numpad0 4 hours ago

      Isn't US EBT card on the same payment network as credit cards? That doesn't count as an independent system. The same set of "they" as Visa/Mastercard gets the fee.

  • estebarb 6 hours ago

    It is not only "their" population. Mastercard and Visa captures a % of each sale done globally with their cards. It is perfectly reasonable for all countries to want to develop their own payment systems and stop paying taxes to the USA.

  • RobotToaster 4 hours ago

    The US is controlled by finance capital, the elections are just to choose it's spokesperson.

  • x-complexity 2 hours ago

    > It's surprising that Visa and Mastercard are even private companies.

    Asianometry provides a great summary as to how both of them came to be: For Visa, a 1976 rebranding of the BankAmericard program. For Mastercard, a 1966 meeting of banks as opposition to BankAmericard.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k2rKS4l6MAk

petterroea 5 hours ago

Visa is trying hard to take over Japan at the moment and it's painful to watch. I'm really rooting for Pix, because the Visa MasterCard monopoly isn't doing us any favours

  • Pooge 4 hours ago

    Could you elaborate? Genuinely interested.

    • petterroea 4 hours ago

      Visa and MasterCard are basically redundant except for international transactions. We already mostly use QR code payments, which is a semi-open standard and somewhat vendor agnostic(with caveats). It works internationally.

      Japan has it's own card companies, and payment systems. Recently, some train lines have started adding support for Visa, but trust me that if you use it in rush hour you will be considered a knob head by everyone behind you as contactless is much slower than the native cards and can't keep up with a fast walking pace. Of course part of the problem here is Sony being greedy and making the international adoption of Felicia hard, but it's complicated.

      The cards are most useful for tourists, and the best argument to introduce cards is international compatability. But international interop doesn't have to look like this, it's just how the playing field ended up looking.

      Last, Visa and MasterCard are both known for being strict on what goods and services they are happy accepting, and it's not ok that so much power is consolidated in two entities in one country.

      I'm not an expert on payment systems, but when I see the large scale advertisements Visa especially are pulling off in Tokyo I see a foreign company trying to disrupt and gain market share while not really benefiting locals who do have mostly moved beyond the need for card payment. I.e my reaction isn't "yay, finally Visa is here too save me" it's "oh no, how will they disrupt and destroy"

      • Pooge 3 hours ago

        Makes sense. I lived there for a year and visit yearly and at the time I didn't notice such an aggressive campaign from Visa.

        IC cards indeed are much faster from my experience (in Hong-Kong and Singapore).

        I hope we can get rid of Visa and MasterCard because they are the reason we don't have free, instant payments.

pimeys 14 hours ago

In EU we have multiple national systems, but now they are trying to unify them to the IBAN system, so you can pay in the same way by opening your bank app and scanning a QR code:

https://wero-wallet.eu/

My bank (N26) should support this later this year. I hope it becomes as big and successful as Pix.

  • laurencerowe 13 hours ago

    Wero sounds similar to the US Zelle system but the big reason for that to exist in the first place is that bank account numbers are not safe to share in the US since they can be used to pull payments so there was never an option for easily transferring money to friends and family other than writing a cheque.

    In the UK and Europe I could just share my bank account number or IBAN and make payments through online banking since the late 1990s (though in the UK they only became instant in 2008.) So Wero sounds like a nice convenience but much less of a game changer.

    It will be interesting to see if it manages to expand to goods and services since the EU strictly regulates the fees Visa and Mastercard can charge there so there is less incentive to switch than in some other countries.

    • pimeys 11 hours ago

      I think the biggest reason is sovereignty: we cannot risk US cutting our payment system if they for example don't give Greenland for them.

      I think this is the biggest reason to ensure you can pay with a local system in shops and restaurants.

      • laurencerowe 7 hours ago

        That's a very reasonable concern, though given how central Visa and Mastercard are I suspect it is probably necessary to regulate their structures within the EU so that intra-EU payments are not reliant on non-sovereign infrastructure.

    • Nathanba 7 hours ago

      Sharing banking information is not safe in Europe, decades ago a phone scammer convinced me to give them my information and they were able to pull money from my account without any permission from me whatsoever, they just acted like I already signed up to their scam service when I never did. That was a completely foreign and insane idea to me (and it is still insane and should not be allowed) that someone can simply withdraw money from my account. They sent me some contract in the mail that I had to apparently reject and otherwise it was automatically approved. Which itself is surely also not legal but the point is that they were able to take money from my account just with my information.

      • kjetijor 3 hours ago

        "decades ago"

        Granted, I'm mostly familiar with the Scandinavian bit of Europe, but you can't do jack shit with banking without 2FA which is tied into the national population register.

        They decided in the 80ies or 90ies that "relying on knowing secret fixed magic numbers" was not ideal for authenticating people, and sat down and worked out solutions to that problem.

      • laurencerowe 2 hours ago

        In the UK direct debits don't require 2FA (but do require approved forms either online or on paper) but you can also very easily get a refund for any direct debit taken from your account so I assume it's simply not worth the scammers' time.

      • imtringued 59 minutes ago

        The way SEPA direct debit mandates work is absolutely mind boggling.

        You'd expect it to work like Paypal, where you have to sign in to your account to authorize the direct debit mandate and also have the option to revoke it there.

        No, the way it works is that you have to print out a form, fill it out and send it to the payee who you are granting the direct debit mandate, e.g. your landlord. Your landlord then sends a copy of the direct debit mandate to your bank and the bank authorizes direct debit payments immediately without asking you.

        If you want to revoke the direct debit mandate, you have to send a form to your landlord that you want to revoke the direct debit mandate.

        This is mindbogglingly stupid, since the payee has no obligation to process your revocation immediately and can take their sweet time.

        Canceling a direct debit mandate has no impact on your obligation to pay rent. It makes no sense that you have to inform the payee and let them gatekeep the revocation. It also makes it possible for unscrupulous people to request a direct debit mandate without your knowledge.

  • tardedmeme 13 hours ago

    To be pedantic, IBAN isn't a payment system, but only an identifier. It's like an IP address - you still need to enlist the services of an ISP to reach it, and that ISP has to find an actual route and send packets over actual cables.

  • raron 5 hours ago

    Wero is just another private company trying get their cut of payment fees. You can do the same thing with SEPA Instant Payment (or some member states outside of the Eurozone have their own similar thing).

    I don't see why Wero should exists, their business model seems like "trying to get money for the same service you can get for free".

    • Pooge 4 hours ago

      I couldn't have said it better. I don't understand what they solve.

      We need instant, free SEPA transfers around the clock. Switzerland is not part of SEPA but IBAN is used so it is trivial to send payments to foreign accounts that have an IBAN.

      I always say that the day Trump decides to block Visa/MasterCard outside the US is the day we get instant payments and finally get rid of cards.

      • ptman 30 minutes ago

        SEPA instant already exists. I think it guarantees sub-10s transactions. Unfortunately it is not the default.

    • rkachowski 4 hours ago

      wero is a european initiative set up by a consortium of banks that is built layered upon instant payments. it's not a private company like paypal or visa, its an attempt at making European payment infrastructure

      • throwaway473825 3 hours ago

        Sweden has a similar "initiative" set up by a consortium of banks (Swish), as do many other European countries.

        Usually these systems raise their fees after being established, sometimes even higher than Visa/Mastercard.

        Brazil's Pix is something else. It wasn't created by private entities to make money.

        • jeroenhd 1 hour ago

          Wero's Dutch predecessor, iDEAL, has been an established part of online payments for 20 years now.

          As barely anyone has a credit card and very people want to deal with the faff of manually entering billing codes or account numbers, iDEAL usage is near universal for online payments. I don't recall fees ever going up as an end customer.

          • throwaway473825 1 hour ago

            Card fees aren't paid by end customers either. The Swedish iDEAL equivalent, Swish, is more expensive than cards for smaller transactions (below 15 euros). Wero will be like Swish, not Pix.

            • jeroenhd 54 minutes ago

              Wero is not something that "will be", Wero already is. It used to be called something else for decades, but that doesn't change much.

    • jeroenhd 1 hour ago

      Wero does several things. You can already send instant payments if you fill out IBAN and such, but entering order numbers, account references, and other such cruft for purchasing products is a pain. Companies receiving such payments also need to connect payment to a user and update their digital processes somehow. Wero offers such a solution so you don't have to find a PSD2 processor (which will probably cost just as much).

      For interpersonal transactions I don't really see the advantage here, but for commercial use cases it's got a solid product and purpose.

      Wero doesn't stand to benefit much from payment fees as European payment fees are already rather slim compared to, for instance, American ones (crazy things like percentages of purchase price with a minimum amount!).

scheme271 12 hours ago

Seems fairly logical for any large country to create something like this. Visa/MC is nice but allows the US to apply undue pressure to individuals. E.g. the US applied financial sanctions on ICC officials in the EU resulting in them losing access to Visa/MC credit cards and banks even those are that are purely EU based.

m101 2 hours ago

The main issue in this market is that the consumer doesn’t pay the cost of the transaction, therefore there is no pressure to reduce costs, and hence no innovation. All of this could be solved if a government regulated that consumers must pay the fee. Here, in the UK, we have obviously regulated the exact opposite of a sensible regulation and were “shocked” when total fees paid on transactions exploded.

ksec 3 hours ago

There is also UPI in India, and I assume something coming soon from China.

I sometimes do wonder if these Goverment can work together on a single payment system, federally operated but connected.

burnJS 7 hours ago

Brazil can do this. Why can't we?

  • esperent 4 hours ago

    Vietnam has a system like this too, QR based and free. India has UPI.

    • martheen 2 hours ago

      QR payments are ubiquitous in South East Asia. The eventual goal is ASEAN-wide interoperability, and some are even already interoperable with South Korean, Japanese and Chinese counterparts. And as expected, the US is also complaining about those, merely because Americans can't grasp the concept, like how they lag on pin adoption.

  • throwaway473825 3 hours ago

    Most likely because your country's banks are heavily lobbying against such initiatives.

    It's easy to blame Visa and Mastercard, but the reason why the EU doesn't have this is that the EPP (the largest political group in the European Parliament) answers to European banks, which don't want it.

    • jeroenhd 1 hour ago

      The EU is literally working on an alternative as we speak: https://www.ecb.europa.eu/euro/digital_euro/html/index.en.ht...

      I think the cryptocurrency-based implementation is stupid and a product of its time, but the EU is investing a lot of money into a system to push Visa and Mastercard out.

      Many countries have their own payment systems already, often widely successful. Integration between these systems has been annoying but things have started to centralize on two or three systems across Europe now.

      • throwaway473825 1 hour ago

        The EU would obviously benefit from a digital euro, but the banks won't give up without a fight:

        https://euperspectives.eu/2026/02/digital-euro-timeline-at-r...

        >Private banks are resistant to a digital euro both as a payment method and a store of value. The digital euro is designed to be a free, public payment method, directly challenging fee-based systems operated by banks. This is its key usefulness in terms of sovereignty. But it could also be used as a digital wallet and users may move their money out of private bank accounts to central bank-backed digital euro wallets meaning banks lose out.

        So far they have successfully delayed any implementation.

        • jeroenhd 56 minutes ago

          The original release was a proof of concept. That proof of concept is currently being developed into a fully-fledged proposal. Once that proposal is accepted, and legislation is ready, the first actual implementations can begin.

          I don't think you can call it a "delay", the project just moves at a glacial pace.

          The entire project was never going to finish before 2030. Some banks are upset about it, for sure, but others are in favour.

bpavuk 3 hours ago

a question for Ukrainians who maybe rode to Brazil and got to try Pix: is it this fast? is monobank faster or slower than Pix?

  • znnajdla 2 hours ago

    They're not really comparable because Pix is interbank while monobank in Ukraine is a single bank.

pelasaco 2 hours ago

The only problem I actually face with Pix in Brazil is:

Some stores only accept Pix and don’t want Visa or cash. As a tourist, you end up unable to access a lot of things because, well, we don’t have Pix.

While I was in Brazil, some thugs with pistols came into a bar where I was. They forced people to send a Pix payment to a specific account, and their money was gone. In the credit card era, I guess the companies, insurance providers, and banks could reverse the transaction and cover the losses. With Pix, as I understand it, nobody feels responsible for it and the money is gone.

  • eb0la 2 hours ago

    Reminder: always travel with a spare phone with a broken screen just in case.

airstrike 7 hours ago

I've been living abroad for over a decade now, so I never got to experience Pix.

I went back to Brazil a few years ago for a couple of weeks, and a kid on the streets asked me if I could buy some chewing gum and help him out. I wanted to, but I had no cash, so I told him I had no cash at all.

He said "It's fine, just send me some with Pix".

I still remember the incredulous look on his face when I told him I also didn't have Pix. He was certain I was lying. "_Everyone_ has it. How come you don't?"

  • pelasaco 2 hours ago

    had the same experience.. "how come you dont have Pix?"

dannyr 7 hours ago

Philippines has QR/Instapay. Not sure if it's complete equivalent of PIX. But basically you can scan a QR code and you can pay using any bank or digital wallet.

nottorp 2 hours ago

Duopolists whining about competition eh?

jacknews 15 hours ago

Every country should have this.

Why would you let America take 2-3% of your transaction volumes?

It perhaps made sense when the technology was difficult, and America was trusted, but ...

  • hvb2 15 hours ago

    I misunderstood, psd2 is Europe's equivalent.

    And yes, every country should have this. Even America

    • Daedren 15 hours ago

      PSD2 is merely a framework for an uniform access to banking, same APIs everywhere. While you can send money through it, it's still through the same means as normal.

      Many of the european countries have their own "Pix", but there's no European-wide alternative. The ECB wants to make one (tentatively titled "digital euro"), but it's going to take a long time to come out.

  • KK7NIL 15 hours ago

    > Why would you let America take 2-3% of your transaction volumes?

    I don't think VISA/Mastercard takes such a fee? (They'd be some of the biggest companies in the world if they did.)

    The fees they charge are actually fractions of a percent, the rest are charged by the card issuer, which is usually your bank.

    You could, in theory, use the VISA network and not pay those fees to a card issuer.

    • surgical_fire 15 hours ago

      Still greater than 0.

      There's absolutely no reason for a country to outsource paynent infrastructure to US corporations.

    • cyberax 14 hours ago

      > You could, in theory, use the VISA network and not pay those fees to a card issuer.

      You can not. The only way is to have a private agreement with the card issuer. That's why stores all try to push their co-branded cards.

  • ExpertAdvisor01 15 hours ago

    It's interesting that we live in 2026 and people still don't understand the fees of credit card processing.

    Visa charges only a Assessment fee the majority goes to Issuer Bank +PSP.

    E.g: Interchange fee (0.8-1.8%): Paid by acquirer to issuer (card-holding bank)

    Assessment fee (0.1-0.3%): Paid to card network (Visa, Mastercard)

    Acquirer margin (0.3-0.8%): Retained by merchant’s payment processor

    • guntars 15 hours ago

      The banks and the payment processors are the real customers of the payment networks and they all do better when they can squeeze more money from the end users - the cardholders and the businesses. Pix cuts out these middlemen and that’s an existential threat to their business model, ergo an “investigation” by the Trump admin.

    • Scaled 15 hours ago

      The army of middlemen with their hands out is the worst part, where you also have fees paid to the merchant bank, the iso/payment service provider, and a chain of agents. In disfavored industries like adult content, this can reach 15% or more, plus thousands in annual "high risk" fees (even if chargeback rate is good). It's a huge anticompetitive racket, and the sooner US can shake off Visa/MasterCard, the better off we'll be.

    • varispeed 14 hours ago

      All should be free. Imagine if government decided to impose 3% revenue tax, yet these companies get a free pass.

      If these networks cannot run this for free, then they should be nationalised and tax payer should cover it. It will be cheaper (because it will become non-profit) for everyone and better.

      • laurencerowe 12 hours ago

        Cash handling also costs businesses money so I'm not sure it needs to be free, just strictly regulated.

        • estebarb 6 hours ago

          Many banks already require monthly or annual payments for keeping an account with them. They also use the money from deposits to lend it at high interest rates. It is not like the banks are not extracting much more than a fair share of revenue from a captive market.

    • laurencerowe 13 hours ago

      EU regulations limit those interchange fees to 0.2% for debit card transactions and 0.3% for credit card transactions so total costs are much lower for businesses. Cards have replaced cash even for small transactions in most European countries.

    • airstrike 7 hours ago

      Any percentage based fee for processing a transaction is borderline criminal.

    • plumeria 5 hours ago

      Add an extra fixed fee if you need 3D Secure (and equivalents). This should be covered already by the assessment and interchange fees to begin with.

      Card networks' moat is their network effect. If you need to take a payment from someone around the world, cards are very convenient. Unless Pix and friends get to interop globally, cards will always have a place.

  • gib444 15 hours ago

    > Why would you let America take 2-3% of your transaction volumes?

    And spy on every single transaction

  • expedition32 14 hours ago

    It made sense back in the 1970s when it was hard for an American to pay for a hotel room in Manilla.

    But in 2026 data moves in a micro second from one continent to another.

  • dyauspitr 13 hours ago

    Exactly and if you think 2-3% is a small number you should keep in mind that that is effectively half of what the market returns over the long-term at 7%.

  • usrnm 13 hours ago

    > Every country should have this

    Many countries do, it's really more common than you might think. The problem is international payments and things like tourism. Want to order something from another country? Want to go there for a week and not have to use cash? In most cases it's either Visa or MasterCard.

g8oz 15 hours ago

Despite what the White House thinks American companies are not owed a business model.

  • bell-cot 14 hours ago

    ...unless they generously grease the right palms, or push the right "us vs. them" buttons.

marcosdumay 15 hours ago

Heh, Lula has a just slight lead on the elections this year.

If he cedes to the pressure, odds are he will so completely destroy his popularity that he won't even be able to be a candidate. He almost certainly knows that.

The pressure is irrelevant. Pix is not going away.

mikeweiss 13 hours ago

When ever I visit Brazil now I feel very left out for not having Pix! I wanna join the electronic cash club. Don't think it's possible for foreigners tho

  • yangm97 6 hours ago

    It should be possible, they issue CPF numbers even for tourists if you want.

    • mikeweiss 5 hours ago

      Problem is you need a Brazilian bank account... Opening a foreign bank account creates tax nightmares.

      • martheen 2 hours ago

        Ah, so they're leaving the money on the table. I suppose they're worried about money laundering.

        Indonesia's electronic wallet have two tiers, unverified and verified. You don't even need a bank account (because most people don't), just a local number (which even tourist can buy easily at airport), with the limitation on unverified tier is that you can only top it up (by cash if you don't have local bank account) and spend it on merchant, no receiving nor sending money. There's also transaction limit but most of the population won't cross that in normal days.

bill38 13 hours ago

In India there is 'UPI' system that is similar.

jnettome 15 hours ago

How difficult is for USA administration learn good practices and initiatives and think into implementing those? And also, why Master and Visa haven’t came with a solution where they integrate with all of that and innovate?

This idea that all they do should be de facto standard for the whole world is so démodé.

  • protastus 14 hours ago

    My understanding is that FedNow could become something like Pix, but implementation is voluntary. In Brazil, the central bank required all retail banks of significance to implement Pix by a certain deadline.

    Visa and Mastercard are very much against FedNow becoming widely used, as it would destroy their business.

  • yndoendo 13 hours ago

    For what MAGA views as good for the USA is actually deplorable loss for the civilized world.

  • protocolture 7 hours ago

    >And also, why Master and Visa haven’t came with a solution where they integrate with all of that and innovate?

    There are a lot of people who integrate with them. The issue is that anyone who does so must comply with the PCIDSS. Most hobbyists cant stretch that far and use intermediaries.

    >This idea that all they do should be de facto standard for the whole world is so démodé.

    I dont know what Brazil's issues were, but Visa and Mastercard show up, they integrate with terminal providers directly and indirectly, and they bring a battle tested data security standard with them. Compared to other industries they are basically self regulating, and in some countries they adopt the PCI DSS into law.

mrkramer 15 hours ago

Pix is for domestic use right? So tourists who come to Brazil still use Visa and Mastercard as well as Brazilian tourists who travel abroad. Visa and Mastercard are companies of the past, crypto and stablecoins will destroy them sooner or later.

  • SirFatty 15 hours ago

    "crypto and stablecoins will destroy them sooner or later."

    LOL!

  • fmobus 12 hours ago

    How many transactions can you ran per second on major coins like BTC?

  • martheen 2 hours ago

    Cross border payment with QR codes are already a thing in plenty of Southeast and East Asian countries. Crypto and stablecoins aren't needed (nor wanted, due to money laundering risks).