Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
RemesaYa is a remittance service focused on Venezuela, with the core promise of sending money to Venezuela “quickly and securely.” Based on the scraped text, senders can pay by tarjeta (bank card), PSE, or transferencia (bank transfer), while recipients receive bolívares through Pago Móvil. In other words, it appears to be a personal remittance product centered on Venezuela’s local receiving network, rather than a general-purpose cross-border payment gateway.
In terms of service type, RemesaYa focuses on personal cross-border or cross-region transfers to Venezuela. On the payment side, it supports bank cards, PSE, and transfers, suggesting some adaptation to payment habits in parts of Latin America or Colombia-related corridors. On the receiving side, it uses Pago Móvil, which is strongly localized to Venezuela. As for coverage, the text only explicitly mentions Venezuela, with no clear indication of support for other countries or multiple currencies.
The current content does not disclose any rates, fees, exchange-rate markup, or minimum/maximum transfer limits. It also does not specify delivery times, using only the general claim of being “fast.” There is no verifiable information about compliance or licensing, and risk-control capabilities are described only in broad terms such as “secure,” without details on identity verification, AML measures, transaction monitoring, fund safeguarding, or the licensed legal entity. API and integration capabilities are not mentioned, so it is not possible to assess whether the service is suitable for merchants or platform-based integrations.
The main advantage is a clearly defined use case: if a user’s primary need is to send funds to a recipient in Venezuela and have them receive bolívares via Pago Móvil, RemesaYa offers a relatively direct product flow, with several payment options available. The downside is limited transparency, especially around the most important aspects of cross-border remittances: fees, exchange rates, delivery time, and regulatory credentials. Users should verify these details before using the service.
Access from mainland China cannot be determined from the available text and should be treated as unknown. Since the service is clearly built around remittances to Venezuela and receipt via Pago Móvil, Chinese users with similar needs should first confirm whether the website is accessible, whether China-issued bank cards are accepted, and whether a local bank account or PSE capability is required. If the service is not usable, users can compare other compliant cross-border remittance providers or Latin America-focused local remittance services, but the right alternative will depend on the sending and receiving countries, currencies, and document requirements.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on remesaya.com official site.
remesaya.com is an Colombia Payments provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 4.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach remesaya.com directly.