Cross-border payments built for global business.

US-to-LatAm and back, through one regulated infrastructure. Settle in minutes, not in two business days. Eliminate the unnecessary legs of the cross-border route.

One FX legSettlement in minutesBacen · FinCEN

The job to be done.

Cross-border payments fail when the route fragments. Funds come in locally, travel abroad to be processed, convert twice, and return to settle domestically — bleeding spreads, SWIFT fees, correspondent charges, and lifting fees on the way.

ATTRUS collapses that route. Inflows, FX, and outflows operate through one integrated treasury layer.

01

Collect locally via Pix, SPEI, PSE, ACH, or stablecoin.

02

Execute FX in one leg — not two.

03

Settle in minutes in the destination currency.

04

Reconcile on event — every state change is a typed webhook.

Reference architecture.

Four steps that collapse the cross-border route into one integrated treasury layer.

01
Collect locally

Pix · SPEI · PSE · ACH · stablecoin

02
Hold balance

Multi-currency Account

03
One FX leg

At execution, disclosed spread

04
Settle locally

In destination currency, minutes

Markets connected.

US connected to every live LatAm market on one regulated infrastructure.

Why companies move cross-border payments to ATTRUS.

Three reasons that compound across every corridor we serve.

Talk to an expert
01
One FX leg, not two.

Most cross-border setups route through two FX conversions. ATTRUS executes once, at the moment of pay-in or payout. The spread, SWIFT fee, and correspondent charge of the second leg disappear.

02
Settlement in minutes, not in T+2.

Pix and SPEI clear in seconds. Same-day in PSE and ACH. The lag that compounded across every cycle is gone.

03
Licensed infrastructure on both sides.

Bacen authorization in Brazil, FinCEN MSB registration in the US, locally compliant frameworks in Mexico and Colombia. Same operator across the full corridor.

Compliance considerations for cross-border.

Brazilian FX is executed under ATTRUS's Bacen authorization; US flows under FinCEN MSB registration. Mexico and Colombia operate under locally compliant frameworks.

Read our full compliance posture

Ready to collapse the cross-border route?

Talk to our team about settlement in minutes, not in T+2.