— the visa, demystified —

The Brazilian Digital Nomad Visa, explained.

Officially called VITEM XIV, this is the visa that lets remote workers and freelancers live legally in Brazil for up to two years. Everything you need to know — without the legalese.

What is VITEM XIV?

In January 2022, Brazil created a temporary visa specifically for remote workers — people who earn income from a foreign employer or foreign clients while living in Brazil. The legal basis is Resolução Normativa nº 45/2021 from the National Immigration Council (CNIg), and the visa code is VITEM XIV.

It's valid for one year and is renewable for one additional year, for a total of two years. After that, you can switch to a different residency category (family, investment, work) if you want to stay longer — and your time on the Digital Nomad Visa counts toward eventual permanent residency and citizenship.

Key idea: The Digital Nomad Visa says "live in Brazil, get paid by people outside of Brazil." You may not take a local Brazilian job while on this visa.

Who qualifies?

To get the visa, you need to be all four of the following:

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Documents you'll need

DocumentWhat it provesNotes
PassportIdentityAt least 6 months validity, 2 blank pages
Application form (RER)Visa requestFilled on the official e-Consular portal (SCI) — form expires after 30 days
Passport-size photosIdentityRecent (last 6 months), color, white background
Proof of remote workYou work for a non-Brazilian employer/clientsLetter from employer OR contracts with foreign clients
Proof of income / savings≥ USD 1,500/mo or ≥ USD 18,000 saved3 months of bank statements minimum; payslips help
Health insurance certificateUSD 30,000+ coverage in BrazilMust explicitly cover Brazil
Criminal background checkClean recordApostilled + sworn-translated
Birth certificateIdentity / civil statusApostilled + sworn-translated
Marriage/divorce certs (if applicable)Civil statusApostilled + sworn-translated
Sworn statement / signed declarationYou'll only do remote workTemplate provided by your consulate
Visa fee receiptPaymentUSD 100–120 + USD 0–200 reciprocity (varies by country)
About apostilles: Brazil is a signatory to the Hague Convention. That means your home country's competent authority (e.g., a Secretary of State in the US, the FCDO in the UK) must affix an apostille on each document. Then a sworn translator registered in Brazil translates it into Portuguese. Don't skip this — un-apostilled documents will be rejected.
Official application links

A full per-country breakdown with Canada and Australia links is on the checklist page.

Where do you apply?

You have two options, and the right one depends on whether you're already in Brazil:

From abroad (recommended)

Apply at the Brazilian consulate or embassy nearest to your home address. The application form lives on Brazil's official e-Consular portal (SCI). You upload documents online, then attend an in-person appointment to submit originals and biometrics.

Pros: Cleaner, fewer surprises. Cons: You have to wait at home until the visa is issued.

From inside Brazil

If you're already in Brazil legally (e.g., on a tourist visa or VAF), you can apply via the MigranteWeb portal of the Federal Police. You submit documents online and attend a Polícia Federal appointment.

Pros: Skip the trip home. Cons: Brazilian agencies, in person — be patient and bring everything in triplicate.

How long does it take?

Plan for 4 to 8 weeks end-to-end. The Ministry of Justice has reduced its document review window to 15–30 days, but you'll spend additional time on:

Costs

Budget realistically. Here's a typical North American applicant's cost stack:

ItemTypical cost (USD)
Visa application feeUSD 100–120
Reciprocity fee (varies)USD 0–200
FBI background checkUSD 18 + apostille
Apostilles (3–5 docs)USD 60–150
Sworn translationsUSD 200–500
Health insurance (annual)USD 600–1,500
Lawyer (optional)USD 1,000–2,500
Total estimateUSD 2,000–4,500

Getting your CPF — do this early

The CPF (Cadastro de Pessoa Física) is Brazil's national tax identification number — the equivalent of a US SSN or UK NIN. You need it for almost everything practical: opening a bank account, signing a lease, buying a SIM card, paying utility bills, booking domestic flights, even buying concert tickets. The good news: it's free, and you can get it from anywhere in the world before you ever set foot in Brazil.

The three ways to get a CPF

Easiest

1. Online from abroad

Receita Federal's online portal accepts applications from foreigners residing outside Brazil. If your profile is straightforward, the CPF number can be issued within minutes. Free of charge.

Apply here:
servicos.receita.fazenda.gov.br (English form) →

Reliable backup

2. At a Brazilian consulate

If the online form rejects you (it sometimes does for certain nationalities or document combinations), book an appointment at the Brazilian consulate covering your home address. Takes ~1–4 weeks. Also free.

Find your consulate:
gov.br/mre →

In Brazil

3. After you arrive in Brazil

Once on the ground, you can request a CPF at any branch of Banco do Brasil, Caixa Econômica Federal, or the Correios (post office). Bring your passport. Fee is around R$7. Issued same-day or within 48 hours.

What you'll need

Step-by-step for the online application

  1. Open the official Receita Federal page: CPF for Foreigners — it has an English option in the upper-right.
  2. Fill in your details exactly as written in your passport. Use the same accent marks (or lack of) — mismatches with your passport cause the most rejections.
  3. Confirm your data on the review screen.
  4. If accepted, you'll receive a protocol number immediately. Save it.
  5. Within minutes to 72 hours you'll get an email confirming your CPF number. If your CPF doesn't arrive within 5 business days, fall back to the consulate route.
Pro tip — the parent-name trap. Brazilian forms require both parents' names. If you don't know one (e.g., a deceased or unknown father), most foreigners enter "Não informado" or simply leave it blank — but each consulate handles this differently. Email the consulate first if this applies to you.

Verifying your CPF later

Once you have a number, you can check its status (active / pending / suspended) anytime at Receita Federal's status check page. Keep the number written down — Brazilians ask for it routinely (waiters at restaurants ask "CPF na nota?" to register your purchase for tax credits).

Action item: Get your CPF before you book accommodation in Brazil. Most long-term Airbnb hosts and all property managers will ask for it on the contract. Five minutes of your time now saves a fortnight of friction later.

After arrival in Brazil

Once you land with the visa, three things must happen:

  1. Register with the Federal Police within 90 days. This is mandatory and converts your visa into a residence registration. You'll book a slot on the Polícia Federal website and bring your apostilled documents, proof of address, and visa.
  2. Confirm your CPF is active. If you got it abroad, double-check the status (see CPF section above). If you didn't, head to a Banco do Brasil, Caixa, or Correios branch on day one.
  3. Open a Brazilian bank account. Nubank, Inter, and C6 are the most foreigner-friendly digital banks. Wise also works for receiving USD/EUR and converting to BRL — most US/EU nomads use Wise as their bridge account before their Brazilian bank is open.

Taxes — read this carefully

Brazil considers you a tax resident if you spend more than 183 days within any 12-month period in the country. Tax residency means your worldwide income may be taxable in Brazil, with credits available under any tax treaty between Brazil and your home country.

The good news: Brazil does not currently have a special tax regime for digital nomads, but its progressive income tax (0–27.5%) is often comparable to or lower than the US, UK, and most of the EU. The bad news: the rules are complex and reporting is annual on the DIRPF.

Action item: Speak with a Brazilian tax accountant before you cross 183 days. Don't guess. We list a few in the partners page.

Renewal — getting your second year

Your initial visa is good for one year. Roughly 30–60 days before it expires, you apply for a one-year extension at the Federal Police. You'll need to show that you still meet the income/savings and insurance criteria, plus an updated background check.

After the second year, the Digital Nomad Visa cannot be renewed again. To stay longer, you'll need to convert to a different residency basis — most commonly the property investor route, retirement, or family reunion.

Common mistakes to avoid

Different from the tourist e-visa. The Digital Nomad Visa (VITEM XIV) covered above lets you live in Brazil for 1–2 years. If you just want to visit, citizens of several countries (US, Canada, Australia, Mexico, France and others) now need a separate tourist e-visa to enter — covered in detail below.

Wait — do I need a tourist e-visa to enter Brazil?

This is the single most confusing point for new applicants, so worth answering clearly. The tourist e-visa and the Digital Nomad Visa are different things. The Digital Nomad Visa (VITEM XIV) is the long-stay visa this page is about. The e-visa is a short-stay visitor permit — and depending on your nationality, you may need it just to enter Brazil for any reason, including to apply for the Digital Nomad Visa from inside the country.

Who needs the tourist e-visa

Brazil reinstated visitor-visa requirements in stages during 2025–2026. As of April 2025, an electronic visa is required for citizens of:

And as of January 2026, the rule was extended to:

If you hold a passport from any other country (most of the EU, UK, Japan, etc.), the visa-waiver agreement remains in place — you can enter Brazil for short stays without a visa.

How the e-visa works

Quick facts

  • Cost: R$257 (~USD 51)
  • Processing: 48–72 hours typically; up to 10 business days
  • Validity: Multiple entries, up to 90 days per visit, max 180 days within any 12-month window
  • Purposes covered: Tourism, business, sports, artistic performances, airport transit
  • Where to apply: Official VFS portal (link below)

Watch out for

  • You must have the e-visa before boarding. Airlines will not issue a boarding pass without a validated e-visa code.
  • The e-visa does not let you work in Brazil — it's a tourist/business visit permit. To work remotely or live long-term, you still need the Digital Nomad Visa.
  • Use only the official site. Many lookalike sites charge inflated fees for the same submission. The government's official portal is at brazil.vfsevisa.com.

Apply for the Brazil tourist e-visa →

Common scenarios

Not sure which applies to you? Check the visa requirement at gov.br/mre or the consulate covering your jurisdiction. The list of nationalities affected by the e-visa requirement has changed twice since 2024 and may change again.

Frequently asked questions

Can I work for my US employer while in Brazil?

Yes — the Digital Nomad Visa is specifically designed for this. As long as your employer is outside Brazil, you keep working for them on your existing contract.

Can I freelance for Brazilian clients on the side?

Technically no — the Digital Nomad Visa restricts you to non-Brazilian sources of income. If you want to invoice Brazilian clients, you'd need a different visa basis or to set up a Brazilian company (with separate tax obligations).

Do my spouse and kids count?

Yes. Spouses and dependent children up to 24 (if studying) can apply for accompanying visas. You'll need apostilled marriage and birth certificates, and you may need to show higher income (typically +25–50% per dependent).

Will the Digital Nomad Visa lead to permanent residency?

Not directly, but time spent on the Digital Nomad Visa counts toward the four years required for naturalization. Most people switch into a long-term residency category (family, investment, retirement) before the Digital Nomad Visa expires.

Do I need a lawyer?

No — many people file successfully on their own. A lawyer is most useful if (a) your case has any complications (income from multiple sources, dependents, prior visa denials), or (b) you simply want a smoother experience. See our directory of lawyers.

Ready for action? Open the step-by-step checklist, or compare alternatives on the residency page.

This guide is informational and current as of 2026. It is not legal advice. Always confirm requirements with the Brazilian consulate covering your jurisdiction and consult a licensed Brazilian immigration lawyer for case-specific guidance.

— last note —

Stop reading. Start applying.

The 30-step checklist takes you from "thinking about it" to "the visa is in my passport." Free, no signup, saves your progress.