Colombia reaches 96.3% financial inclusion in 2024

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.

Colombia's progress in financial inclusion marks a major milestone at the end of 2024, when 96.3% of the adult population held at least one deposit or credit product. This figure, reported by the Superintendencia Financiera, shows a 1.7 percentage point increase from the previous year and confirms the widespread availability of basic financial services like savings accounts and low-value deposits.

Yet the real challenge lies in effectively using these products and ensuring fair access to credit. Territorial gaps are stark: rural areas have only 65.6% access, compared to near-universal coverage in urban zones, while usage in rural settings stands at 53.4% versus 89.3% in cities (Superfinanciera data, 2024). Historically excluded regions like the Caribbean and Pacific coasts lag in utilizing these services.

Traditional banking plays a vital role but often prioritizes more profitable segments. The financial cooperative system, with its social focus and territorial reach, is positioned to lead the growth of productive credit for small producers and farmers. In 2025, this sector saw a significant rise in such credit placements, enabling rural families to buy inputs, entrepreneurs to invest in machinery, and productive units to create formal jobs.

Cooperatives stand out for their deep penetration in remote areas, community proximity, and ability to build trust where banks arrive late or expensively. Against this backdrop, the Superintendencia de la Economía Solidaria has emphasized strengthening these entities through solvency standards and savings protection. A key 2025 achievement was authorizing three new Savings and Credit Cooperatives, including the first in Cauca department, opening doors for local families and businesses.

Overall, while Colombia nears universal product ownership, shifting to transformative usage demands policies to bridge rural, regional, and gender divides, with cooperatives serving as the vital link between grassroots economies and formal finance.

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