Born in a pandemic. Targeted by a president.
Pix goes live perfect timing
Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, the Central Bank launches Pix. With contactless payments suddenly essential, adoption explodes. Within 6 months, over 90 million Brazilians register no-contact transfers become the new normal overnight.
Brazil becomes #2 in instant payments globally
Brazil processes 29.2 billion Pix transactions second only to India, 15% of all real-time payments on Earth. Up 229% year over year. The world takes notice.
Pix por Aproximação: tap-to-pay, no card
Brazil launches NFC-based Pix tap your phone to pay at any terminal, just like Apple Pay or Google Pay, but free and tied straight to your bank account. Apple and Google watch the threat become real.
Trump orders a USA investigation into Brazil
At Trump's direction, the USA trade representative opens a formal Section 301 investigation into Brazil's alleged "unfair trading practices." Without naming Pix, the probe targets government-run payment systems said to harm Visa, Mastercard, Apple Pay and Google Pay.
50% tariffs on everything Brazil exports to USA
Trump imposes 50% tariffs on Brazilian goods among the highest of his trade war. Officially tied to the Bolsonaro trial, but analysts point to Pix and de-dollarization as the deeper motives. Brazil's foreign minister says Pix does not harm USA companies.
Pix hits 54.7% of all transactions in the country
Despite USA pressure, Pix hits a new milestone: over half of all financial transactions in Brazil. 42.9 billion operations in H2 2025 alone, up 24.3% year over year. The Central Bank logs 313 million Pix in a single day a world record.
50+ countries study the Pix model
Brazil talks with central banks and institutions from 50+ countries about replicating Pix. Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay, Chile, Peru and Mexico already accept it. Economist Paul Krugman calls it "the future of money." Washington grows more anxious.
Apple refuses to implement Pix por Aproximação
Apple publicly defends its right to charge fees for contactless payment technology and declares Pix por Aproximação "not a priority for Brazilians.", which goes against the massive 90M users in the first year. The real reason is financial: Apple Pay takes a cut from every tap payment processed through its NFC stack. Pix por Aproximação is universally free, there is nothing for Apple to extract. A system that cannot be monetized through fees is, by Apple's logic, not worth supporting.
Bolsonaro, Trump and the threat to Pix
Senator Flávio Bolsonaro, son of former president Jair Bolsonaro arrested for attempted coup d'état floated as a 2026 presidential candidate, tightens ties with Trump's circle. Allies of the family argue for rolling back or even ending the Pix mandate, realigning Brazil with USA card networks. Critics warn: a government hostile to the state-run system could weaken, or kill, Pix as Brazilians know it.
Eduardo Bolsonaro, another son of Jair Bolsonaro and a fugitive from Brazilian justice living in the United States, went further: in an interview, he openly suggested Brazil should scrap Pix and replace it with Zelle, a private, USA bank-backed payment system. The proposal drew swift backlash from economists and Pix users, who called it a surrender of Brazilian financial sovereignty to American corporate interests.