Colombians using fintech apps from Nu, Nequi, Lemon, and DataCrédito Experian to organize finances, manage debts, and plan for 2026.
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Fintech firms share strategies for financial health in 2026

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Following year-end holidays, companies like Nu, Nequi, Lemon, and DataCrédito Experian offer practical advice for organizing personal finances and accessing responsible credit in Colombia. These tips aim to help users manage debts, optimize spending, and plan goals for the new year.

At the start of 2026, Colombia's fintech sector presents various tools and strategies to regain financial order after December spending. Nu Colombia emphasizes reviewing card statements and December bills to visualize expenses, along with setting limits on available credit. "We know December is a month of exceptional spending and can bring financial stress. That's why our innovation focuses on creating flexible tools," stated Santiago Matamoros, Nu's Product Director.

Additionally, Nu suggests the avalanche method for debts, prioritizing those with the highest interest rates, and allows adjusting installments in its app to fit the user's budget.

Meanwhile, Nequi reported disbursing $1.3 billion in credits from January to September 2025, with an average ticket of $2.4 million. 68% of beneficiaries had low or no credit experience. Nequi's CEO, Andrés Vásquez, noted: "Credit, when designed from the people, does work as a lever for progress." In December 2025, they offered $8.2 billion in preapproved credits to over two million clients, betting on financial inclusion in 2026.

Lemon, expanding into Colombia with 5.5 million regional users, announced handling Colombian peso balances in its digital wallet. Users can deposit and withdraw in pesos, convert to digital dollars (yielding up to 10% annually) or bitcoin instantly, via PSE or ACH, with future Bre-B integration.

DataCrédito Experian, which recorded nearly 800,000 monthly queries on Midatacrédito.com at the end of 2025, advises reviewing credit history to detect errors and fraud, using AI tools to organize income and outflows, optimizing expenses, reducing high-interest debts like credit cards, and setting clear goals such as emergency funds or savings for housing.

These initiatives reflect the sector's commitment to responsible financial education in a post-holiday economic recovery context.

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Realistic illustration of Colombia's 2025 economic and social challenges contrasted with hopeful renewal, featuring worried citizens, symbolic decay, and community unity.
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Year-end reflections on Colombia's challenges in 2025

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At the close of 2025, Colombian columnists highlight distrust, governmental ineffectiveness, and an economic crisis worsened by debts and taxes as the main threats to the country. While criticizing official lies and poor fiscal management, they call for building trust, social commitment, and education for a hopeful future.

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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The financial platform Nequi reported disruptions in several services on Friday, December 15, coinciding with payday and Black Friday. Transfers to Bancolombia and between Nequi users were mainly affected. Some services like PSE payments and the Nequi card were operating normally by 2:30 p.m.

Finance experts recommend setting clear goals with deadlines, creating a detailed budget, and tracking income and expenses periodically to organize finances in 2026. This approach helps move beyond traditional superstitions toward realistic planning. Advisors like Andrés Moreno Jaramillo and María Teresa Macías emphasize starting with an assessment of one's current financial situation.

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The Colombian government has withdrawn state funding from Colfuturo's Crédito Beca program, which supported postgraduate studies abroad for over 20 years, to redirect resources toward a new doctoral scholarship model targeting vulnerable populations. Science Minister Yesenia Olaya defended the move, stating that Colfuturo failed to meet democratization criteria for educational access. The decision has drawn criticism for restricting opportunities amid global technological shifts.

Shinhan Card has identified six key consumer trends for 2026, including AI-assisted spending. These trends are summarized under the term 'Wise up,' reflecting an era where consumers use technology and data for smarter choices. The analysis draws from big data covering January to October 2025.

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Building on Colfuturo's announcement that its Programa Crédito Beca will forgo state funding from 2026 after two decades, President Gustavo Petro has detailed the program's unequal distribution favoring wealthier students, reigniting national debate on higher education equity.

 

 

 

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