As travel demand strengthens across regions and spending patterns become more digitally driven, payment systems are being pushed to keep up—especially where cashless habits at home collide with fragmented acceptance abroad. That pressure is helping drive cross-border payments innovation, including Alipay’s continued expansion into Latin America.
The Alipay brand is best known for the digital wallet used by more than a billion people in mainland China. However, Alipay+ is a global payments gateway designed to connect millions of merchants and consumers across borders through a unified platform.
Alipay+ includes a wide network of partners, spanning more than 50 digital wallets and financial services apps, as well as several national QR payments platforms. Many users within this ecosystem have considered traveling to or staying in Latin America but have often been daunted by payments complexities.
Under a new integration facilitated through a partnership with Latin American fintech PVS, Alipay+ users will be able to make QR-code payments at participating merchants using their existing wallets. The goal is to enable cross-border mobile payments with the same convenience, transparency, and security users expect from domestic transactions.
Driving Real-World Integrations
Improving the cross-border payments experience has been a long-term priority for governments and the private sector alike. While commercial payments and remittances often receive the most attention, travel and tourism have become important catalysts for real-world integrations.
China, for example, has continued to deepen payment connectivity across Southeast Asia, including through the linkage of Indonesia’s Quick Response Code Indonesian Standard (QRIS) with major Chinese payment ecosystems such as Alipay and UnionPay. One of the main goals of this initiative is to simplify payments for travelers between the two markets.
Domestic Systems Going Global
Although stablecoins and global card networks like Visa and Mastercard are frequently viewed as leading contenders in cross-border payments, many regions are pursuing interoperability between domestic payment systems.
The European Union has explored connecting its TARGET Instant Payment Settlement (TIPS) service with India’s Unified Payments Interface (UPI). This could increase the reach of both systems, particularly given UPI’s scale in global digital payments.
These types of partnerships are likely to proliferate, driven in part by the economic importance of tourism and cross-border commerce. UPI has also explored potential integration with Alipay+, a move that could further cement the international role of both platforms while reinforcing their presence in both domestic and cross-border payments.








