Latin American startups secured approximately $304.1 million in disclosed funding this week, with capital flowing toward companies building financial infrastructure, enterprise software, and operational technology platforms. From digital banking and AI-powered legal software to healthtech solutions, investors continued favoring startups that improve efficiency within large and established industries.

The Week’s Largest Startup Funding Rounds
Here are the biggest disclosed startup funding rounds across Latin America this week, ranked from largest to smallest.
/1. Banco Plata, $300M, Fintech, Mexico
Banco Plata captured the overwhelming majority of this week's capital after securing $300 million from Oaktree, Macquarie Group, Fasanara Capital, and Banco Covalto through a financing facility structured by Nomura.
The digital bank offers lending and banking services across Mexico and has been rapidly expanding its presence following its Series C round earlier this year. According to the company, its loan portfolio grew by double digits in Q1 2026, and it attracted nearly $213 million in deposits within its first month operating as a regulated bank.
The funding will allow Banco Plata to scale lending activities while diversifying its funding structure, reinforcing investor appetite for fintech companies that have successfully transitioned from growth-stage startups into large-scale financial institutions.
/2. Inspira, $2.8M (R$15 Million), LegalTech, Brazil
Brazilian legaltech startup Inspira raised a $2.8 million Series A round led by Cloud9 Capital and Vivo Ventures to expand its AI-powered legal operations platform.
Since its establishment in 2022, the company has combined legal research, workflow automation, and institutional knowledge management into a single platform used by more than 14,000 active users. Its database covers 86 courts and processes roughly 83 million legal decisions with daily updates.
The new funding will help Inspira expand into new customer segments, including independent lawyers, law schools, and public institutions, while further strengthening its artificial intelligence capabilities.
/3. SPAKIO, $1.3M, Logistics & Storage Infrastructure, Mexico
SPAKIO in a seed extension has bagged $1.3 million investment from Liverpool Ventures and Variv Capital, alongside new participation from Tantauco Ventures and Flecha Amarilla to expand its technology-enabled storage platform, bringing total funding since inception to $3.2 million.
Rather than requiring customers to visit storage facilities, SPAKIO handles collection, inventory management, and delivery through a digital-first model. The company says the latest funding will support technology development, operational improvements, and geographic expansion throughout Mexico.
/4. Adros, Undisclosed Pre-Seed Round at $2M (R$10 Million) Valuation, Healthtech, Brazil
Adros is a Brazilian startup that focuses on modernizing healthcare commercial operations by helping providers improve patient engagement, communication, and relationship management through a centralized platform.
In its recent funding round, the healthtech startup closed an undisclosed amount from a group of angel investors at a valuation of approximately $2 million (R$10 million). Participants included Marcelo Lacerda, co-founder of Terra Networks, Lucas Moraes, founder of Olivia and a Votorantim board member, alongside Carlos Ambrosio, Fernando Ortenblad, Renata Porto, and Marcelo Peano.
With the new capital, Adros plans to accelerate platform development and expand its customer base. The startup will invest in product enhancements and operational growth as it works to modernize patient relationship management across Brazil's healthcare sector.
Conclusion
This week’s funding activity highlights continued investor confidence in financial services, AI-powered enterprise software, and technology-enabled health infrastructure. While Banco Plata’s financing dominated the week, the remaining rounds underscore growing demand for platforms helping businesses automate operations, improve efficiency, and modernize traditional industries across Latin America.
