Usury rate rises to 25.23% in February, making credit more expensive

The Superintendencia Financiera announced that the usury rate for February reaches 25.23% effective annual, up from 24.36% in January, raising costs for credit card purchases. Entities like Lulo Bank and Coltefinanciera operate near the limit, while Coopcentral and Banco GNB Sudameris keep lower rates. Experts highlight the impact on informal credit and propose system reforms.

Colombia's Superintendencia Financiera reported that the usury rate for February 2026 stands at 25.23% effective annual (E.A.), an increase from January's 24.36%. This rise means higher costs for consumers in credit operations, such as card purchases.

Based on data as of January 16, 2026, Lulo Bank, Coltefinanciera, and JFK Cooperativa Financiera have rates close to the cap: 24.31%, 24.31%, and 24.26% E.A., respectively. Followed by Banco Falabella at 24.21%, Banco Unión at 24.16%, Finandina at 23.83%, and Tuya at 24.05%. In contrast, Coopcentral, Banco GNB Sudameris, and Banagrario maintain farther indicators: 18.37%, 19.73%, and 19.73% E.A. Others like Itaú and AV Villas are at 21.56%, and Banco de Occidente at 21.84%.

David Cubides, chief economist at Banco de Occidente, explained that high rates reduce appetite for formal credit, pushing toward informal options like 'gota a gota'. "In mechanisms like ‘gota a gota’, interest rates are so high that they end up impacting Colombians very strongly, who resort to it out of sheer necessity," he noted. He added that these informal rates can be eight or ten times higher than formal ones, with added risks like insecurity.

Gabriel Santos, president of Colombia Fintech, called for progressive reforms: "The country must make a progressive modification. It can start by separating consumer and business credit rates, eliminating discounted rates from the usury calculation." Cubides also linked the rise to 6% inflation forecasts and higher Banco de la República rates, affecting 11 million informal workers.

By modality, large-amount productive credit is 27.17% E.A., rural 19.45%, and urban 38.15%. In popular credit, rural reaches 46.98% and urban 58.70%, reflecting higher risk.

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Banco de la República board announcing 100 basis point interest rate hike to 10.25% due to inflation from minimum wage increase, with concerned Finance Minister.
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Banco de la República hikes interest rate to 10.25% amid inflation surge and minimum wage controversy

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Colombia's Banco de la República raised its intervention rate by 100 basis points to 10.25%—the highest in over a year—in its first 2026 board meeting, citing persistent inflation above 5% for nearly six months and unanchored expectations from a 23.8% minimum wage hike decreed by President Petro's government. The decision, with a split 4-2-1 vote, drew market surprise and government criticism over economic contraction risks.

Colombia's Superintendencia Financiera set the usury rate at 24.36% effective annual for January, down 0.66 percentage points from December. This lowers the cap on interest banks can charge on loans and credit cards, making financing more affordable for users. The adjustment directly affects the cost of deferring payments on purchases.

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Colombia's financial market anticipates that the Banco de la República will raise its interest rate at the January 30, 2026 meeting, according to a Citi survey. Out of 25 consulted entities, 17 expect an adjustment to 9.75%, while only five foresee it staying at 9.5%. This outlook is driven by the minimum wage increase and inflation projected at 5.8%.

Colombia ended 2024 with 96.3% financial inclusion among adults, up 1.7 percentage points from 2023, according to the Superintendencia Financiera. While access has become widespread, challenges remain in product usage and closing territorial and gender gaps. In 2025, three new savings and credit cooperatives were authorized to boost productive credit in excluded regions.

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Colombia's inflation is projected at 4.9% for 2026, missing the Banco de la República's target range for the sixth consecutive year. A Corficolombiana report estimates it will close 2025 at 5.2%, roughly the same as last year, signaling a stall in disinflation. The goal of nearing 3% is now delayed until 2027.

Following stalled talks where unions demanded a 16% rise and businesses warned of economic risks, President Gustavo Petro decreed on December 30 a 23% increase in Colombia's 2026 minimum wage, to 1,750,905 pesos plus 24.5% higher transportation aid of 249,095 pesos, totaling 2 million pesos monthly. The hike benefits 2.4 million formal workers and aims for an ILO 'vital wage,' but prompts debate on inflation, SME impacts, and competitiveness.

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The Colombian government set a debt quota of $152.25 trillion to finance part of the 2026 General National Budget, according to a Ministry of Finance decree. This amount, lower than in 2025, accounts for four points of GDP and is split between treasury bonds and temporary operations.

 

 

 

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