What began as a tiny startup in São Paulo has become one of Latin America’s largest financial institutions, reshaping banking across the region and beyond.
A modest beginning with a bold idea
Nubank was founded in 2013 in São Paulo by David Vélez and his co-founders with a simple but disruptive vision: eliminate the inefficiencies of traditional banking. The company started in a small house, targeting a market where millions of consumers were underserved by expensive and bureaucratic financial institutions.
Its first product—a no-fee credit card managed entirely via a mobile app—directly addressed customer frustration with high fees and poor service. This simplicity, combined with a digital-first approach, allowed Nubank to scale rapidly without the overhead of physical branches.
Rapid growth and investor backing
From its earliest funding rounds, Nubank attracted global investors, including Sequoia Capital and later major institutions such as Berkshire Hathaway and Tencent. The company quickly reached “unicorn” status, surpassing a $1 billion valuation within a few years of launch.
Growth was exponential. Within a decade, Nubank expanded beyond Brazil into Mexico and Colombia, building a customer base that exceeded 90 million users. This scale transformed the company from a niche disruptor into a dominant regional financial player.
Disrupting traditional banking models
Nubank’s success lies in its ability to challenge entrenched banking systems. Traditional banks in Latin America had long operated with high fees, limited accessibility and complex processes. Nubank replaced this with a streamlined, mobile-first experience focused on transparency and low cost.
By leveraging data, automation and customer-centric design, the company reduced operational costs and expanded access to financial services. This allowed it to serve millions of previously unbanked or underbanked individuals, positioning itself not just as a fintech, but as a financial inclusion platform.
From startup to market leader
Today, Nubank is one of the largest fintech companies in the world and among the biggest financial institutions in Latin America by customer base. Its parent company, Nu Holdings, is publicly listed, reflecting its transition from startup to global financial player.
The company continues to expand its ecosystem, offering savings accounts, loans, insurance and investment products—all within a digital environment. Its growth trajectory has also influenced the rise of competing fintechs across the region, accelerating innovation in Latin America’s financial sector.
A blueprint for emerging markets
Nubank’s journey illustrates how small, technology-driven enterprises can scale rapidly in emerging markets by addressing structural inefficiencies. Its model—low-cost, mobile-first and customer-centric—has become a blueprint for fintech innovation across Latin America and beyond.
More broadly, the company represents a shift in how financial services are delivered, moving away from physical infrastructure toward digital platforms capable of reaching vast populations at scale. What began in a small house has evolved into a continent-spanning financial powerhouse, redefining what is possible in modern banking.
Newshub Editorial in South America – April 7, 2026
If you have an account with ChatGPT you get deeper explanations,
background and context related to what you are reading.
Open an account:
Open an account

Recent Comments