VaultLeap vs Grey: Which Is Better for LATAM Freelancers?

VaultLeap

VaultLeap

Grey and VaultLeap both solve the same fundamental problem: people outside the US need a way to receive dollars. But they were built for different regions, and that difference shapes everything – from the currencies they support to the payment rails they offer.

Grey was built primarily for the Nigerian and African market. VaultLeap was built for Latin America. If you are a freelancer in Mexico, Colombia, Argentina, or Brazil, that distinction matters more than any feature comparison chart.

Grey: Built for Africa

Grey launched in 2020 as a US dollar account for Nigerians. It has since expanded to other African countries and added GBP and EUR support. Grey has built a strong community around its product – their WhatsApp groups and social presence are well-known in the Nigerian freelance community.

Grey provides USD and GBP accounts with US routing numbers and UK sort codes. Users can receive international payments and withdraw to local bank accounts. The product is custodial – Grey holds funds on your behalf.

VaultLeap: Built for Latin America

VaultLeap launched in January 2025 with a focus on LATAM freelancers and small businesses. The product offers USD, EUR, MXN, and BRL accounts with support for ACH, wire, SEPA, and SPEI payment rails. Funds settle on USDC/EURC stablecoins in self-custodial wallets, meaning users hold their own private keys.

Currency and Rail Comparison

Feature Grey VaultLeap
USD Account Yes Yes
EUR Account Yes Yes
GBP Account Yes No
MXN Account No Yes
BRL Account No Yes (Business)
ACH Yes Yes
Wire Yes Yes
SEPA Yes Yes
SPEI (Mexico) No Yes
Self-Custody No Yes
Virtual Card Yes Coming Soon
Physical Card No Coming Soon
Withdrawal to Local Bank Yes (Africa) Yes (LATAM)

Fees

Grey charges a flat monthly fee (around $4.99/month for their standard plan) plus conversion fees when withdrawing to local currency. Their fee structure varies by country and currency pair.

VaultLeap has no monthly fee. Transaction fees are 0.75% on the Standard tier, 0.65% on Pro, and 0% on the Zero tier (up to $40K/month). There are no hidden FX markups – what you see is what you pay.

Self-Custody vs Custodial

This is the most significant architectural difference. Grey operates like a traditional custodial wallet – they hold your funds, you trust them to safeguard them. This is the standard model most people are familiar with.

VaultLeap uses stablecoin settlement (USDC for USD, EURC for EUR) in self-custodial wallets. You hold the private keys. If VaultLeap disappeared tomorrow, you could still access your funds through your private keys on any compatible wallet. This eliminates platform risk at the custodial level.

Self-custody is not for everyone. It means you are responsible for your private keys. If you lose them, nobody can recover your funds. But for users who have experienced platform freezes or want maximum control, it is a meaningful advantage.

Regional Focus

Grey’s strength is Africa. Their support team understands Nigerian banking challenges, NGN withdrawal routes, and the specific problems African freelancers face (BVN verification, local bank limits, CBN regulations).

VaultLeap’s strength is Latin America. MXN accounts with SPEI access (Mexico’s instant payment system), BRL accounts for Brazilian businesses, and infrastructure designed for the LATAM freelancer receiving payments from US and European clients.

Community and Support

Grey has invested heavily in community – active WhatsApp groups, responsive social media, and a reputation built through years of serving the Nigerian market. If you value peer support and an active user community, Grey has an edge here.

VaultLeap is newer (launched January 2025) and has a smaller user base. Support is direct but does not yet have the community scale Grey has built over four years.

Which Should You Choose?

If you are in Nigeria or another African country, Grey is the more established option with local currency withdrawal routes optimized for your region.

If you are in Mexico, Brazil, Colombia, or anywhere in Latin America, VaultLeap offers currency support (MXN, BRL) and payment rails (SPEI) that Grey simply does not have. The self-custodial architecture is a bonus if platform independence matters to you.

Both are legitimate products solving real problems. The question is which region yours is built for.

VaultLeap is a financial technology company, not a bank. Banking and payment services are provided by Bridge, a licensed money transmitter and regulated payment provider, in partnership with Lead Bank, Member FDIC. VaultLeap does not hold or have custody of customer funds.

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