Cross-border merchant
A cross-border merchant is an e-commerce operator who sells products into a country where they do not have a registered local entity, local team, or local logistics infrastructure. Most MENA, Asia, US, and EU merchants entering LATAM operate cross-border.
Cross-border merchants face structural friction that local merchants do not: no local bank account for COD settlements, no in-country team to manage carriers, no Spanish call center to confirm orders, no legal entity to issue tax invoices. Each gap is a place where the operation can break.
The COD Enablement Platform category exists primarily to close those gaps. A merchant in Casablanca selling into Mexico City can route through a single operator that handles warehousing, confirmation, last-mile, cash collection, currency conversion, and bank transfer — without the merchant needing a Mexican LLC.
Fufills' primary ICP is cross-border merchants from MENA, Asia, US, and EU. Of our 16-country footprint, only Puerto Rico is one where we operate as a registered local merchant (FUFILLS LLC, SURI 1639264-0010). Everywhere else we serve cross-border merchants who never set foot in-country.
Cash on Delivery (COD)
Cash on delivery (COD) is a payment method where customers pay for products at the time of delivery rather than during online checkout. The carrier collects cash from the customer and remits it to the merchant through settlement cycles.
COD finance ops
COD finance ops is the end-to-end financial workflow that moves money from the customer\'s doorstep to the merchant\'s bank account: cash collection coordination, reconciliation per order, currency conversion, and settlement cycle to the merchant.
Want this run for you?
Fufills runs the full COD execution stack across 16 LATAM countries.