Argentine fintech Takenos processes $500M+ in cross-border payments using its own Solana (SOL) stablecoin, with 500k users across 20 Latin American countries. (Argentine fintech Takenos processes $500M+ in cross-border payments using its own Solana (SOL) stablecoin, with 500k users across 20 Latin American countries. (

Takenos Hits $500M Volume on Solana (SOL)-Based Payroll Stablecoin

2026/03/17 08:42
3 min read
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Takenos Hits $500M Volume on Solana (SOL)-Based Payroll Stablecoin

James Ding Mar 17, 2026 00:42

Argentine fintech Takenos processes $500M+ in cross-border payments using its own Solana (SOL) stablecoin, with 500k users across 20 Latin American countries.

Takenos Hits $500M Volume on Solana (SOL)-Based Payroll Stablecoin

Takenos, the Argentine fintech tackling Latin America's broken cross-border payment system, has processed over $500 million in total payment volume using its proprietary stablecoin built on Solana (SOL). The platform now handles $10 million in on-chain monthly volume and serves more than 500,000 users across 20 countries.

The numbers matter because they represent real money flowing to real workers. Over $100 billion enters Latin America annually as cross-border income—freelancers, remote contractors, creators getting paid by companies abroad. Traditional correspondent banking eats 3-10% of that in fees and takes 2-5 business days to clear. Takenos claims to settle payments in under two seconds.

Why Build Your Own Stablecoin?

Rather than using USDC or USDT, Takenos deployed its own USD-pegged token. The reasoning is straightforward: control. Managing their own reserves lets them capture interest margin on balances, build compliance rules directly into the smart contract, and keep transaction costs predictable as volume scales. Bridge, a regulated financial partner, holds and attests the off-chain USD reserves backing each token.

The architecture works like this: employer funds payroll in USD, Takenos mints equivalent stablecoins after compliance checks clear, workers receive funds in their Takenos wallet within seconds. From there, they can spend via virtual card, hold in dollars, or withdraw to local bank accounts.

"I spent years getting paid through different channels, losing a huge percentage to commissions and waiting days to receive my money," said Renato Piermarini, a Takenos user in Argentina. "I've been able to deposit my salary without worry. And in Argentina, that's no small feat."

Growth Trajectory and Expansion

Takenos reported roughly 20% month-over-month growth throughout 2025 following the stablecoin deployment. The platform consistently ranks among the top three finance apps in Bolivia's app store—a telling indicator of demand in markets where traditional banking infrastructure fails remote workers.

The company secured $5 million in seed funding and is expanding into Peru. Earlier partnerships have strengthened the offering: a January 2025 deal with Rain launched TakeCard for cross-border payments, while an October 2025 integration with Coinflow added instant settlement infrastructure.

The Solana Bet

Solana's technical specs made it the obvious choice for this use case. Block times around 400 milliseconds enable sub-two-second finality. Median fees hover near $0.001, keeping small-dollar payouts economically viable. The network's parallel execution handles thousands of concurrent transfers during regional payout waves—critical when you're processing payroll for half a million users.

What Takenos demonstrates isn't particularly revolutionary from a crypto-native perspective. Stablecoins for payments has been the thesis for years. But execution at this scale, with regulatory compliance baked in and real users in developing markets actually depending on it? That's the part most projects never reach.

The $100 billion flowing into Latin America annually won't move on-chain overnight. But Takenos just proved that a meaningful chunk of it can—and workers keep more of what they earn when it does.

Image source: Shutterstock
  • solana
  • stablecoins
  • cross-border payments
  • latin america
  • fintech
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