IBOV 176,608 ▲ 2.24% IPSA 10,989 ▼ 0.33% IPC MEX 66,661 ▲ 0.84% MERVAL 3,218,549 ▲ 0.50% COLCAP 2,290.36 ▼ 0.10% BVL PERÚ 56,194.27 ▲ 1.01% USD/BRL5.11▼ 0.10% USD/MXN17.51▼ 0.19% USD/CLP925.49▼ 0.24% USD/COP3,247▼ 2.87% USD/PEN3.39▼ 0.30% USD/ARS1,487▼ 0.03% USD/UYU40.22▲ 1.20% USD/PYG6,055▲ 1.53% USD/BOB10.14▲ 4.01% USD/DOP58.48▼ 0.12% USD/CRC448.82▲ 1.40% USD/GTQ7.63▲ 2.28% USD/HNL26.72▲ 1.50% USD/NIO36.62▲ 0.26% USD/VES707.92▼ 0.13% USD/PAB1.00— 0.00% USD/BZD2.00— 0.00% USD/JMD158.09▲ 0.81% USD/TTD6.75▲ 1.32% EUR/BRL5.83▼ 0.99% BRENT 76.39 ▲ 0.12% WTI 71.90 ▼ 0.25% IRON ORE 161.91 — — COPPER 6.28 ▲ 1.04% GOLD 4,116 ▼ 0.36% SILVER 60.18 ▼ 0.33% SOY 1,188 ▲ 0.66% CORN 456.75 ▲ 6.78% WHEAT 646.00 ▲ 5.69% COFFEE 327.15 ▼ 8.35% SUGAR 14.83 ▼ 1.92% ORANGE JUICE 147.35 ▼ 1.70% COTTON 80.08 ▲ 5.15% COCOA 6,054 ▼ 4.04% BEEF 230.55 ▼ 2.00% CATTLE 355.05 ▼ 0.31% LITHIUM 72.05 ▼ 1.06% PETR4 39.60 ▲ 0.99% VALE3 74.33 ▲ 1.61% ITUB4 43.75 ▲ 2.72% BBDC4 18.60 ▲ 3.33% ABEV3 15.85 ▲ 0.83% BBAS3 20.39 ▲ 1.95% B3SA3 15.36 ▲ 3.85% WEGE3 46.63 ▲ 1.95% PRIO3 55.26 ▼ 0.63% SUZB3 41.68 ▲ 1.58% RENT3 40.72 ▲ 3.35% AZZA3 18.92 ▲ 2.49% CSAN3 3.97 ▲ 2.85% RAIZ4 0.36 ▼ 2.70% PCAR3 2.78 ▲ 0.72% GMAT3 4.01 ▲ 2.04% PSSA3 54.23 ▲ 1.65% CVCB3 1.26 ▲ 0.80% POSI3 3.98 ▲ 3.38% SLCE3 13.88 ▲ 0.65% NATU3 8.50 ▲ 0.47% BRKM5 6.40 ▲ 0.63% RANI3 7.99 ▲ 1.65% CSNA3 5.08 ▲ 5.83% CMIN3 5.09 ▲ 5.38% USIM5 8.40 ▲ 0.60% GGBR4 23.02 ▲ 2.40% ENEV3 26.83 ▲ 2.40% CPFE3 47.19 ▲ 1.94% CMIG4 11.31 ▲ 2.08% EQTL3 40.59 ▲ 2.73% LREN3 14.64 ▲ 3.46% VIVT3 35.60 ▲ 3.19% RAIL3 13.93 ▲ 1.31% KLABIN 17.50 ▲ 0.57% RAIA DROGASIL 18.57 ▲ 2.43% RDOR3 35.97 ▲ 2.33% HAPV3 10.39 ▲ 3.18% FLRY3 16.25 ▲ 3.17% SMTO3 15.99 ▼ 0.37% UGPA3 30.62 ▲ 1.73% VBBR3 32.49 ▲ 1.22% BBSE3 39.77 ▲ 1.25% BPAC11 57.23 ▲ 2.78% CURY3 33.85 ▲ 3.52% AERI3 2.08 ▲ 0.97% VIVARA 22.94 ▲ 1.59% COMPASS 24.98 ▲ 1.22% VAMOS 3.03 ▲ 2.36% SANB11 27.15 ▲ 3.43% ASAI3 8.85 ▲ 4.61% SBSP3 30.93 ▲ 3.10% WALMEX 49.46 ▲ 0.90% GMEXICO 196.51 ▲ 0.60% FEMSA 224.10 ▲ 0.78% CEMEX 22.14 ▲ 1.98% GFNORTE 188.82 ▲ 1.87% BIMBO 56.03 ▲ 0.18% TELEVISA 9.57 ▲ 0.84% AMX 23.01 ▲ 1.63% GAP 411.99 ▼ 0.42% ASUR 283.74 ▲ 0.04% OMA 238.44 ▲ 0.18% KOF 182.29 ▲ 0.77% GRUMA 285.26 ▲ 1.05% KIMBER 38.18 ▼ 0.68% SQM-B 67,777 ▼ 1.91% COPEC 6,021 ▲ 0.02% BSANTANDER 77.80 ▲ 0.39% FALABELLA 5,850 ▼ 0.02% ENELAM 84.64 ▲ 0.57% CENCOSUD 2,060 ▲ 0.17% CMPC 1,108 ▲ 1.19% BANCO CHILE 188.27 ▲ 0.68% LATAM AIR 26.19 ▼ 0.80% YPF 74,050 ▼ 2.28% GGAL 8,070 ▲ 2.41% PAMPA 5,165 ▼ 0.77% TXAR 660.50 ▼ 0.60% ALUAR 974.00 ▲ 0.57% TGS 9,510 ▲ 2.15% CEPU 2,295 ▼ 0.86% MIRGOR 17,025 ▼ 1.02% COME 45.49 ▲ 0.15% LOMA NEGRA 3,495 ▼ 0.07% BYMA 311.50 ▲ 0.57% TELECOM ARG 4,105 ▼ 0.36% ECOPETROL 15.21 ▼ 1.17% BANCOLOMBIA 82.48 ▲ 1.92% GRUPO AVAL 5.07 ▲ 1.00% CREDICORP 401.97 ▲ 2.56% SOUTHERN COPPER 176.03 ▲ 0.92% BUENAVENTURA 30.02 ▲ 1.59% MERCADOLIBRE 1,864 ▲ 3.10% NUBANK 14.00 ▲ 2.38% XP 17.06 ▲ 3.96% PAGSEGURO 9.35 ▲ 3.83% STONE 11.25 ▲ 2.65% GLOBANT 30.70 ▼ 1.89% TECNOGLASS 43.87 ▲ 1.68% GAP AIRPORT 235.21 ▲ 0.32% ASUR 283.74 ▲ 0.04% OMA AIRPORT 109.01 ▲ 0.63% AMX ADR 26.25 ▲ 1.59% FEMSA ADR 128.22 ▲ 0.96% CEMEX ADR 12.65 ▲ 2.22% PETROBRAS ADR 17.18 ▲ 0.90% VALE ADR 14.50 ▲ 1.97% ITAU ADR 8.57 ▲ 3.50% SANTANDER BR 5.38 ▲ 4.57% AMBEV ADR 3.08 ▲ 1.15% CSN 1.00 ▲ 4.70% GERDAU 4.53 ▲ 2.61% LATAM ADR 56.74 ▼ 0.53% BTC 63,863 ▲ 1.06% ETH 1,784 ▲ 2.25% SOL 77.83 ▼ 0.28% XRP 1.10 ▲ 0.64% BNB 571.70 ▲ 0.57% ADA 0.17 ▼ 0.55% DOGE 0.07 ▲ 1.31% AVAX 6.69 ▲ 0.11% LINK 7.89 ▲ 2.01% DOT 0.87 ▲ 5.44% LTC 44.41 ▲ 1.47% BCH 249.30 ▲ 4.85% TRX 0.33 ▼ 0.41% XLM 0.19 ▲ 1.04% HBAR 0.07 ▲ 0.11% NEAR 1.89 ▼ 1.59% ATOM 1.57 ▲ 1.37% AAVE 94.46 ▲ 3.51% SELIC 14.25% EMBRAER 84.79 ▲ 1.11% EMBRAER ADR 66.26 ▲ 1.10% JBS 11.92 ▲ 1.59% JBS BDR 60.81 ▲ 1.27% MBRF3 15.79 ▲ 2.47% MBRFY 3.03 ▲ 1.00% INTER 5.91 ▲ 3.50% EGX 52,312 ▲ 0.54% USD/ZAR16.32▼ 0.02% USD/NGN1,376▼ 0.12% NIKKEI 68,558 ▲ 1.20% CSI300 4,781 ▼ 1.96% HSI 24,175 ▲ 0.60% NIFTY 24,207 ▲ 1.02% KOSPI 7,476 ▲ 2.52% JCI 5,924 ▲ 0.20% USD/JPY161.82▼ 0.35% USD/CNY6.78▼ 0.24% DAX 25,066 ▼ 0.21% CAC 8,325 ▼ 0.02% FTSE 10,495 ▲ 0.21% MIB 52,688 ▲ 0.58% IBEX 19,409 ▲ 0.45% STOXX 641.33 ▲ 0.07% EUR/USD1.14▼ 0.04% GBP/USD1.34▲ 0.11% SPX 7,537 ▼ 0.09% DJI 52,523 ▲ 0.07% NDX 29,613 ▼ 0.38% RUT 2,975 ▼ 0.59% TSX 35,197 ▼ 0.01% VIX 15.71 ▼ 0.82% USD/CAD1.42▼ 0.13% US10Y 4.5570 ▲ 0.40% IBOV 176,608 ▲ 2.24% IPSA 10,989 ▼ 0.33% IPC MEX 66,661 ▲ 0.84% MERVAL 3,218,549 ▲ 0.50% COLCAP 2,290.36 ▼ 0.10% BVL PERÚ 56,194.27 ▲ 1.01% USD/BRL 5.11 ▼ 1.02% USD/MXN 17.51 ▼ 0.31% USD/CLP 925.57 ▼ 0.97% USD/COP 3,247 ▼ 2.88% USD/PEN 3.39 ▼ 0.44% USD/ARS 1,487 ▼ 0.03% USD/UYU 40.22 ▲ 1.20% USD/PYG 6,055 ▲ 1.53% USD/BOB 10.14 ▲ 4.01% USD/DOP 58.48 ▼ 0.12% USD/CRC 448.82 ▲ 1.40% USD/GTQ 7.63 ▲ 2.28% USD/HNL 26.72 ▲ 1.50% USD/NIO 36.62 ▲ 0.26% USD/VES 707.92 ▲ 5.15% USD/PAB 1.00 — 0.00% USD/BZD 2.00 — 0.00% USD/JMD 158.09 ▲ 0.81% USD/TTD 6.75 ▲ 1.32% EUR/BRL 5.83 ▼ 0.99% BRENT 76.39 ▲ 0.12% WTI 71.90 ▼ 0.25% IRON ORE 161.91 — — COPPER 6.28 ▲ 1.04% GOLD 4,116 ▼ 0.36% SILVER 60.18 ▼ 0.33% SOY 1,188 ▲ 0.66% CORN 456.75 ▲ 6.78% WHEAT 646.00 ▲ 5.69% COFFEE 327.15 ▼ 8.35% SUGAR 14.83 ▼ 1.92% ORANGE JUICE 147.35 ▼ 1.70% COTTON 80.08 ▲ 5.15% COCOA 6,054 ▼ 4.04% BEEF 230.55 ▼ 2.00% CATTLE 355.05 ▼ 0.31% LITHIUM 72.05 ▼ 1.06% PETR4 39.60 ▲ 0.99% VALE3 74.33 ▲ 1.61% ITUB4 43.75 ▲ 2.72% BBDC4 18.60 ▲ 3.33% ABEV3 15.85 ▲ 0.83% BBAS3 20.39 ▲ 1.95% B3SA3 15.36 ▲ 3.85% WEGE3 46.63 ▲ 1.95% PRIO3 55.26 ▼ 0.63% SUZB3 41.68 ▲ 1.58% RENT3 40.72 ▲ 3.35% AZZA3 18.92 ▲ 2.49% CSAN3 3.97 ▲ 2.85% RAIZ4 0.36 ▼ 2.70% PCAR3 2.78 ▲ 0.72% GMAT3 4.01 ▲ 2.04% PSSA3 54.23 ▲ 1.65% CVCB3 1.26 ▲ 0.80% POSI3 3.98 ▲ 3.38% SLCE3 13.88 ▲ 0.65% NATU3 8.50 ▲ 0.47% BRKM5 6.40 ▲ 0.63% RANI3 7.99 ▲ 1.65% CSNA3 5.08 ▲ 5.83% CMIN3 5.09 ▲ 5.38% USIM5 8.40 ▲ 0.60% GGBR4 23.02 ▲ 2.40% ENEV3 26.83 ▲ 2.40% CPFE3 47.19 ▲ 1.94% CMIG4 11.31 ▲ 2.08% EQTL3 40.59 ▲ 2.73% LREN3 14.64 ▲ 3.46% VIVT3 35.60 ▲ 3.19% RAIL3 13.93 ▲ 1.31% KLABIN 17.50 ▲ 0.57% RAIA DROGASIL 18.57 ▲ 2.43% RDOR3 35.97 ▲ 2.33% HAPV3 10.39 ▲ 3.18% FLRY3 16.25 ▲ 3.17% SMTO3 15.99 ▼ 0.37% UGPA3 30.62 ▲ 1.73% VBBR3 32.49 ▲ 1.22% BBSE3 39.77 ▲ 1.25% BPAC11 57.23 ▲ 2.78% CURY3 33.85 ▲ 3.52% AERI3 2.08 ▲ 0.97% VIVARA 22.94 ▲ 1.59% COMPASS 24.98 ▲ 1.22% VAMOS 3.03 ▲ 2.36% SANB11 27.15 ▲ 3.43% ASAI3 8.85 ▲ 4.61% SBSP3 30.93 ▲ 3.10% WALMEX 49.46 ▲ 0.90% GMEXICO 196.51 ▲ 0.60% FEMSA 224.10 ▲ 0.78% CEMEX 22.14 ▲ 1.98% GFNORTE 188.82 ▲ 1.87% BIMBO 56.03 ▲ 0.18% TELEVISA 9.57 ▲ 0.84% AMX 23.01 ▲ 1.63% GAP 411.99 ▼ 0.42% ASUR 283.74 ▲ 0.04% OMA 238.44 ▲ 0.18% KOF 182.29 ▲ 0.77% GRUMA 285.26 ▲ 1.05% KIMBER 38.18 ▼ 0.68% SQM-B 67,777 ▼ 1.91% COPEC 6,021 ▲ 0.02% BSANTANDER 77.80 ▲ 0.39% FALABELLA 5,850 ▼ 0.02% ENELAM 84.64 ▲ 0.57% CENCOSUD 2,060 ▲ 0.17% CMPC 1,108 ▲ 1.19% BANCO CHILE 188.27 ▲ 0.68% LATAM AIR 26.19 ▼ 0.80% YPF 74,050 ▼ 2.28% GGAL 8,070 ▲ 2.41% PAMPA 5,165 ▼ 0.77% TXAR 660.50 ▼ 0.60% ALUAR 974.00 ▲ 0.57% TGS 9,510 ▲ 2.15% CEPU 2,295 ▼ 0.86% MIRGOR 17,025 ▼ 1.02% COME 45.49 ▲ 0.15% LOMA NEGRA 3,495 ▼ 0.07% BYMA 311.50 ▲ 0.57% TELECOM ARG 4,105 ▼ 0.36% ECOPETROL 15.21 ▼ 1.17% BANCOLOMBIA 82.48 ▲ 1.92% GRUPO AVAL 5.07 ▲ 1.00% CREDICORP 401.97 ▲ 2.56% SOUTHERN COPPER 176.03 ▲ 0.92% BUENAVENTURA 30.02 ▲ 1.59% MERCADOLIBRE 1,864 ▲ 3.10% NUBANK 14.00 ▲ 2.38% XP 17.06 ▲ 3.96% PAGSEGURO 9.35 ▲ 3.83% STONE 11.25 ▲ 2.65% GLOBANT 30.70 ▼ 1.89% TECNOGLASS 43.87 ▲ 1.68% GAP AIRPORT 235.21 ▲ 0.32% ASUR 283.74 ▲ 0.04% OMA AIRPORT 109.01 ▲ 0.63% AMX ADR 26.25 ▲ 1.59% FEMSA ADR 128.22 ▲ 0.96% CEMEX ADR 12.65 ▲ 2.22% PETROBRAS ADR 17.18 ▲ 0.90% VALE ADR 14.50 ▲ 1.97% ITAU ADR 8.57 ▲ 3.50% SANTANDER BR 5.38 ▲ 4.57% AMBEV ADR 3.08 ▲ 1.15% CSN 1.00 ▲ 4.70% GERDAU 4.53 ▲ 2.61% LATAM ADR 56.74 ▼ 0.53% BTC 63,863 ▲ 1.06% ETH 1,784 ▲ 2.25% SOL 77.83 ▼ 0.28% XRP 1.10 ▲ 0.64% BNB 571.70 ▲ 0.57% ADA 0.17 ▼ 0.55% DOGE 0.07 ▲ 1.31% AVAX 6.69 ▲ 0.11% LINK 7.89 ▲ 2.01% DOT 0.87 ▲ 5.44% LTC 44.41 ▲ 1.47% BCH 249.30 ▲ 4.85% TRX 0.33 ▼ 0.41% XLM 0.19 ▲ 1.04% HBAR 0.07 ▲ 0.11% NEAR 1.89 ▼ 1.59% ATOM 1.57 ▲ 1.37% AAVE 94.46 ▲ 3.51% SELIC 14.25% EMBRAER 84.79 ▲ 1.11% EMBRAER ADR 66.26 ▲ 1.10% JBS 11.92 ▲ 1.59% JBS BDR 60.81 ▲ 1.27% MBRF3 15.79 ▲ 2.47% MBRFY 3.03 ▲ 1.00% INTER 5.91 ▲ 3.50% EGX 52,312 ▲ 0.54% USD/ZAR 16.33 ▲ 0.13% USD/NGN 1,376 ▲ 0.08% NIKKEI 68,558 ▲ 1.20% CSI300 4,781 ▼ 1.96% HSI 24,175 ▲ 0.60% NIFTY 24,207 ▲ 1.02% KOSPI 7,476 ▲ 2.52% JCI 5,924 ▲ 0.20% USD/JPY 161.83 ▼ 0.32% USD/CNY 6.7767 ▼ 0.22% DAX 25,066 ▼ 0.21% CAC 8,325 ▼ 0.02% FTSE 10,495 ▲ 0.21% MIB 52,688 ▲ 0.58% IBEX 19,409 ▲ 0.45% STOXX 641.33 ▲ 0.07% EUR/USD 1.1426 ▼ 0.07% GBP/USD 1.3411 ▲ 0.05% SPX 7,537 ▼ 0.09% DJI 52,523 ▲ 0.07% NDX 29,613 ▼ 0.38% RUT 2,975 ▼ 0.59% TSX 35,197 ▼ 0.01% VIX 15.71 ▼ 0.82% USD/CAD 1.4151 ▼ 0.11% US10Y 4.5570 ▲ 0.40%
since 2009
Friday, July 10, 2026

Colombia Latin America

Why Colombia’s World Cup Shopping Just Got More Expensive on Credit

By · June 15, 2026 · 5 min read

Daily Brief

The morning intel from across Latin America. Free.

By subscribing you agree to our privacy policy. We never share your email.

Colombia · Markets

Key Facts

The cap. Colombia sets a legal ceiling on lending rates, known as the usury rate, which has just been raised.

The timing. The increase lands just as World Cup fever drives Colombians to spend on tickets, travel and merchandise.

One-stop reference
Company Intelligence
Every listed company in Latin America — financials, ownership and structure for 1,450+ companies across 26 exchanges, in one place.
Browse the directory →

The effect. Purchases made with a credit card or in instalments can now legally carry higher interest.

The backdrop. Colombia’s central bank rate sits near 10 percent, among the highest in the region.

The squeeze. Most households say extra income vanishes into everyday costs, leaving little room for big one-off purchases.

The vote. It all unfolds days before a tense presidential runoff on June 21 dominated by the economy.

In Colombia, the World Cup has arrived alongside an awkward piece of timing: borrowing money to enjoy it has just become more expensive by law.

Colombia football fans shopping for World Cup merchandise and paying by credit card
Why Colombia’s World Cup Shopping Just Got More Expensive on Credit. (Photo internet reproduction)
RT
Ask Rio Times
17 years of Latin America reporting, on demand.
Open the full Ask Rio Times →

As the 2026 World Cup kicks off, Colombian football fans are reaching for their wallets. Many are paying with credit, and the cost of doing so has just climbed.

The reason is a technical change with a very real effect on shoppers. Colombia has raised what it calls the usury rate, the legal ceiling on how much interest a lender is allowed to charge.

For a reader abroad, the usury rate is simply the maximum interest permitted by law. When the authorities lift that ceiling, banks and shops can charge more for credit-card balances and instalment plans.

The timing is what makes it sting. The increase arrives exactly as the tournament tempts Colombians to spend on match tickets, team shirts, televisions and trips to watch the games.

How the rate cap squeezes World Cup spending in Colombia

Much of this spending is not paid for upfront. Colombian consumers lean heavily on credit cards and on the instalment plans that stores offer at the till.

When the legal ceiling rises, the interest attached to those purchases can rise with it. A television or a flight bought on credit today can end up costing noticeably more by the time it is paid off.

Property advisers have flagged a parallel effect in the wider economy. Some report that businesses which failed to lock in deals early now face costs that have jumped sharply, a sign of how quickly dearer credit ripples outward.

The mechanism is worth spelling out plainly. The usury rate is recalculated regularly and tracks the cost of money in the wider economy, so when interest rates stay high, the ceiling tends to drift upward with them.

A higher ceiling does not force every lender to charge more, but it removes the legal brake. In a market where demand for credit is rising with the football, that headroom usually translates into dearer borrowing.

The pressure is heavier because Colombian borrowing was already costly. The central bank’s benchmark interest rate sits near ten percent, among the highest of the major Latin American economies.

Why households feel it so quickly

Family budgets in Colombia are already stretched thin. Surveys suggest the large majority of citizens see any extra income swallowed up by everyday living costs.

That leaves little spare cash for a one-off splurge on the football. For many fans, enjoying the tournament means borrowing, and borrowing now carries a higher price tag.

There is a darker side to the same story. When legal credit grows expensive, some borrowers turn to informal lenders, whose rates are far harsher and whose collection methods can be dangerous.

For a foreign reader, the episode is a small window into a stretched economy. It shows how a quiet regulatory tweak can reach all the way into a household’s decision about whether to enjoy a global sporting party.

A backdrop of high stakes

The squeeze also carries a political charge. It unfolds days before a tense presidential runoff on June 21, a vote in which the cost of living has been a central theme.

Whoever wins will inherit an economy with stubborn inflation, heavy public debt and some of the dearest credit in the region. For ordinary Colombians, the price of a World Cup television is one more reminder of that strain.

The lesson reaches beyond the football. It is a reminder that in a high-rate economy, the cost of a celebration is measured not just in the sticker price but in the interest that follows it home.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Colombia’s usury rate?

It is the legal ceiling on how much interest a lender in Colombia is allowed to charge. When the authorities raise it, banks and shops can legally charge more for credit cards and instalment purchases.

Why does this matter during the World Cup?

Many Colombians buy tickets, travel and merchandise on credit. With the rate cap higher, those purchases can carry more interest, making it costlier to enjoy the tournament.

How expensive is borrowing in Colombia?

The central bank’s benchmark rate sits near ten percent, among the highest of the major Latin American economies. That makes consumer credit unusually dear even before the higher ceiling is applied.

Connected Coverage

Why Colombia is paying record rates on its public debt

What is driving Colombia’s central bank interest rate higher

Read More from The Rio Times

The Rio Times · Power Map
See who really holds power in Latin America
Click to open the Power Map

Rotate for Best Experience

This report is optimized for landscape viewing. Rotate your phone for the full experience.