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How to Borrow Against Crypto in Latin America (2026 Guide)

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Crypto lending is gaining traction across Latin America. The driver is practical: users hold volatile assets but need stable liquidity. Selling crypto creates tax events and removes upside exposure, but borrowing solves both problems.

This guide explains how crypto loans work in LATAM, where they are used, what risks matter, and how platforms differ.

Why Crypto Loans Are Growing in LATAM

Several structural factors explain the demand.

Currency instability.
In countries like Argentina and Brazil, local currencies can lose value quickly. Specifically, the inflation rate in Argentina reached over 33% in February 2026. So, holding BTC or USDT is a common hedge against inflation, and borrowing against those assets allows access to dollars without converting positions.

Limited access to credit.
Traditional banking systems often restrict lending or price it aggressively. Crypto-backed loans offer a parallel system with fewer barriers.

Dollar demand.
Many users need USD or USD-equivalents for business, imports, or savings. Crypto loans typically settle in USDT, USDC, or fiat USD, which aligns with that demand.

Rising crypto adoption.
LATAM consistently ranks among the fastest-growing crypto regions. More holders means more collateral available for lending.

How Borrowing Against Crypto Works

At a structural level, all crypto loans follow the same mechanics.

1. Collateral

You deposit crypto—typically BTC, ETH, or a mix of assets. This collateral is locked while the loan is active.

2. Loan-to-Value (LTV)

LTV defines how much you can borrow relative to your collateral.

  • 20% LTV → deposit $10,000 → borrow $2,000
  • 50% LTV → deposit $10,000 → borrow $5,000

Lower LTV reduces risk and usually lowers interest rates.

3. Liquidation

If the market drops and your LTV rises beyond a threshold, part of your collateral is sold to repay the loan. This is the main risk in crypto lending.

4. Interest Model

Traditional crypto loans charge interest on the full borrowed amount from day one.

Newer models, such as crypto credit lines, are more flexible. With Clapp, for example, interest accrues only on the amount actually used, while unused credit carries 0% APR when the LTV is kept under 20%.  

Clapp: Flexible Credit Line for LATAM Users

Clapp.finance fits the LATAM use case through structure rather than marketing.

Global access through a regulated framework.
The platform operates as a Digital Asset Service Provider (DASP) in El Salvador and a VASP in Europe, aligning with compliance requirements across regions .

USD, USDT, and USDC liquidity.
Borrowers can access stable currencies that are widely used across Latin America for savings and payments.

Credit-line model instead of fixed loans.
You receive a borrowing limit and draw funds as needed. Interest applies only to used capital, while unused credit remains at 0% APR .

No repayment schedule.
There are no fixed monthly payments. Users repay partially or fully at any time, which aligns with irregular cash flows common in emerging markets .

Multi-collateral support.
Up to 19 assets can be combined into one collateral pool, allowing more efficient capital usage for diversified portfolios .

24/7 liquidity.
Funds can be withdrawn or managed instantly through the platform wallet, which matters in markets where timing affects exchange rates and purchasing power .

This structure reflects how users in LATAM actually borrow: selectively, opportunistically, and often under volatile conditions.

Key Use Cases in Latin America

Crypto loans are rarely used for speculation alone. In LATAM, they serve concrete financial needs.

Access to USD Liquidity

A user in Brazil holding BTC can borrow USDC and pay suppliers without selling their position. This avoids conversion friction and preserves long-term exposure.

Inflation Hedge

Instead of selling crypto to cover expenses, users borrow against it and repay later. If the asset appreciates, the real cost of borrowing decreases.

Business Cash Flow

Small businesses use crypto-backed credit lines as working capital. Funds can be drawn when needed and repaid flexibly.

Portfolio Management

Borrowing allows users to rebalance or deploy capital without liquidating core holdings.

Risks in Emerging Markets

Crypto lending carries universal risks, but LATAM adds local layers.

Volatility risk.
Sharp price drops can trigger liquidation quickly, especially at high LTV.

Currency mismatch.
Borrowing in USD while earning in local currency creates repayment pressure if exchange rates move.

Regulatory fragmentation.
Rules differ across countries. Some jurisdictions remain undefined, which affects platform access and compliance.

Platform risk.
Not all lenders operate under clear regulatory frameworks. Counterparty risk remains relevant.

A conservative approach—low LTV, diversified collateral, and liquid platforms—reduces exposure.

What Matters in Choosing a Lending Crypto Platform

When choosing a crypto lending platform in LATAM, four variables define the experience.

FactorWhat to Look For
APR structureFixed vs LTV-based rates, hidden tiers
LTV limitsConservative thresholds reduce liquidation risk
FlexibilityAbility to repay anytime, draw partially
Liquidity accessSpeed of withdrawals and supported currencies

Many platforms still follow a rigid loan model: fixed amount, fixed interest, fixed schedule. Clapp’s credit-line structure is more adaptive.

Final Takeaway

Crypto lending in Latin America is becoming a practical financial tool where traditional systems fall short. Users can deposit crypto, borrow against it, and manage LTV carefully. The nuance lies in platform design and cost structure.

For LATAM users, the key variables are liquidity in stable currencies, flexibility in repayment, and protection against volatility. Credit-line models address these better than fixed loans.

Borrowing against crypto works when it is used conservatively. Low LTV, clear cost structure, and reliable access to funds define the difference between a useful tool and unnecessary risk.

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