Startups across Latin America raised a combined $25.5 million this week, based on disclosed funding rounds tracked by Techloy, with investor capital flowing mainly into fintech infrastructure and credit-focused platforms. A small number of mid-stage deals made up most of the funding activity during the week.

The Week’s Largest Startup Funding Rounds
Here are the biggest disclosed startup funding rounds across Latin America.
1. Alfred, $15M, Fintech, Mexico
Alfred provides cross-border payment infrastructure for businesses. Its B2B platform connects local banks, real-time payment systems, and stablecoins through a single API, helping companies move money across borders more easily.
The Series A round was led by F-Prime Capital, with support from Brevan Howard Digital and White Star Capital. The funds will be used to strengthen Alfred’s technology, regulatory setup, and operations across Latin America. The company operates in Mexico, Brazil, Colombia, and Argentina, and has processed nearly four million transactions for more than 2.5 million users.
2. Nagro, $9.5M, AgFintech, Brazil
Nagro offers credit solutions for small and midsize farmers through its AgRisk platform, which combines credit analysis and risk monitoring. The Brazilian startup raised a $9.5 million Series B round led by Rabo Partnerships, with participation from Itaú Ventures.
The company will use the funding to scale its AI capabilities, improve predictive models, and expand operations across Latin America as it builds data-driven credit tools for the agriculture sector.
3. Leracom AI, $1M, AI SaaS, Mexico
Leracom AI is a customer service software platform that combines AI, automation, and human input to improve how companies communicate with customers. The startup raised a $1 million pre-seed round led by WeBoost, with support from several venture firms and angel investors.
The funding will be used for product development and regional expansion across Mexico, Colombia, and Chile, as the company helps businesses train AI agents for automated chat systems.
Conclusion
With $25.5 million in disclosed funding this week, investor attention in Latin America remains focused on fintech infrastructure and credit platforms. At the same time, early-stage AI startups continue to attract smaller but strategic rounds. The mix of growth and pre-seed deals points to steady momentum across both core financial systems and emerging software tools in the region.
