Brazil is one of the world’s most dynamic emerging markets. It is home to Latin America’s largest economy, a booming tech and renewable energy sector, and some of the most attractive real estate opportunities in the region.
Through the Brazil Investment Visa, foreign nationals can obtain residency in the countryvia two different routes: purchasing real estate or make aqualifying business investment. Often referred to asBrazil’s Golden Visa or theBrazil VIPER Visa, the program offers a pathway to long-term residency and eventual Brazilian citizenship.
The visa offers two distinct routes. Thereal estate pathway is ideal for those seeking a more streamlined, property-based option with fewer ongoing obligations. Thebusiness investment pathway targets investors and entrepreneurs looking to establish or capitalize a Brazilian company. Both routes provide full residency rights, family inclusion, and access to Brazil’s public services, with the real estate option typically being the more passive and lifestyle-oriented choice.
In this guide, we explain how the Brazil Investment Visa works, including minimum investment amounts, eligibility criteria, application process, residency rights, and the path to Brazilian citizenship.
TheBrazil Investment Visa is Brazil’s main Residency by Investment program for foreign nationals wishing to live, work, and invest in the country.
The program is sometimes informally referred to as theBrazil Residency by Investment, Brazil Golden Visa, or Brazil VIPER Visa, although none of these are official names.
Brazil’s Investment Visa allows foreign nationals to obtain residency in Brazil throughtwo different pathways: real estate or business investment.
To qualify, investors can inject capital into anew or existing Brazilian company, participate inhigh-growth sectors like technology and renewable energy, orpurchase property in the country.
Real estate investors begin withtemporary residency, which can be converted to permanent residency after meeting renewal and investment maintenance requirements. Business investors typically qualify forpermanent residency immediately.
Both pathways to the Brazil Investor Visa allow applicants to include eligible family members, enjoy full residency rights, and work toward obtainingBrazilian citizenship after meeting the legal residence period (the standard rule is 4 years, but can be shortened).
Purchase of qualifying residential or commercial property.
| Residency Outcome | Key Benefits |
|---|---|
| Begins with 2-year temporary residency, easily renewable and convertible to permanent residency. | ✔ Passive investment with no business management required. ✔ Provides a tangible asset in Brazil’s growing real estate market. ✔ Popular route for families, retirees, and lifestyle relocation. ✔ Lower risk, less bureaucracy, and more straightforward compliance. |
Capital injection into a Brazilian company, including innovation/startups
| Residency Outcome | Key Benefits |
|---|---|
| Often grants permanent residency from the start, depending on business impact. | ✔ Immediate or accelerated permanent residency eligibility. ✔ Suitable for entrepreneurs wishing to operate a business in Brazil. ✔ Direct participation in Brazil’s growing tech, energy, and innovation sectors. |
Regardless of the chosen route, applicants may include immediate family members, access public and private services, and work toward Brazilian citizenship after fulfilling the legal residence period (typically four years of permanent residency).
TheBrazil Investor Visa offers one of the most flexible and accessible residency-by-investment pathways in Latin America. Whether obtained through the real estate route or via business capital injection, the program provides a wide range of lifestyle, mobility, and long-term settlement advantages for foreign investors and their families.
Holders canlive, work, study, and start a business anywhere in the country. Unlike many residency programs, Brazil places no restrictions on employment or business activity for investor residents.
Both investment routes offer a pathway to long-term residency and citizenship.
The real estate investment route offerstemporary residency for two years, which can be converted to permanent residency. The business investment route, on the other hand, grantspermanent residency from the start.
Once permanent residency has been held the sufficient amount of time, investors may apply for Brazilian citizenship afterfour years of legal residence. Dual citizenship is permitted under Brazilian law.
Spouses, partners, and dependent children can all be added to a single Brazil Investor Visa application, making it ideal for families planning long-term relocation or a generational Plan B.
Residents can access public healthcare, education, and social services, along with the ability to participate in Brazil’s banking and financial system—crucial for investing, buying property, or running a business.
Brazil is a full member ofMercosur, offering investor residents simplified residence and work access to countries likeArgentina, Uruguay, and Paraguay, and easier movement across South America.
Brazil offers strong rental yields, undervalued real estate in major cities like São Paulo and Rio, and abundant opportunities in technology, agribusiness, renewable energy, and tourism.
Some investor residents, particularly those on the real estate route, can maintain their residency with minimal physical presence, depending on the permit issued and renewal rules in place.
The combination of residency rights, investment opportunity, and a clear pathway to citizenship makes the Investor’s Visa Brazil an increasingly sought-after alternative to European Golden Visas.
The qualifying investment requirements depend on whether the applicant follows the real estate investment route or the business investment route:
This attractive pathway grants residency through thepurchase of eligible urban residential or commercial property. It offers apassive, secure, and lifestyle-focused path to residency. It’s also oftentimes simpler than the business investment route.
Minimum investment:
| Location | Required Investment |
|---|---|
| Standard (Urban Centers) | BRL 1,000,000 (approx. USD $196,000) |
| North or Northeast development regions | BRL 700,000 (approx. USD $137,000) |
Popular eligible cities: São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Recife, Fortaleza, Salvador, Natal, João Pessoa, Maceió
Key requirements:
Investment preferences: Rental-yield properties in São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, beachfront real estate in Bahia, development projects in Ceará, and high-growth regions like Pernambuco.
This route allows investors toestablish or inject capital into a Brazilian company while securing residency. It is most suitable for applicants who want anactive role in Brazilian business, startups, or commercial expansion.
Minimum investment:
| Investment Type | Required Capital |
|---|---|
| Standard business investment | BRL 500,000 (approx. USD $98,000) |
| Innovation/startup investment | BRL 150,000 (approx. USD $29,500) — reserved for tech, innovation, AI, biotech, green energy, and approved startups |
Key requirements:
Popular sectors: Fintech, agritech, renewable energy, logistics, e-commerce, cybersecurity, and export-oriented manufacturing.
To qualify for the Brazil Investment Visa, applicants must meet both investment-specific and general eligibility criteria. These ensure the investor’s financial capacity, legal compliance, and ability to contribute to Brazil’s economic and social development.
All applicants, regardless of whether they choose thereal estate investment orbusiness investment route, must meet the following criteria:
| Requirement | Details |
|---|---|
| Age | Must be at least 18 years old. Minor children can be included as dependents. |
| Criminal record | Clean criminal record from all countries where the applicant has lived in the past five years. Certificates must be apostilled and translated. |
| Proof of funds | Investment funds must come from verifiable, legal sources (bank transfers, audit trail). |
| Health and insurance | No serious contagious diseases; some consulates require proof of health insurance during temporary residency. |
| Legal entry status | If applying from within Brazil, must hold legal immigration status (for example, a visitor visa or visa waiver at the time of application). |
| CPF registration | Must hold a validCPF (Cadastro de Pessoas Físicas), which is Brazil’s tax ID number. |
| Presence in Brazil (post-approval) | Must appear in person to complete biometric registration with the Federal Police and receive the residency card. |
To qualify through real estate investment, the applicant must:
To qualify through business investment, the applicant must:
The Brazil Investor Visa allows the inclusion of family members under one residency application.
Dependents who can be included:
| Eligible family members | Conditions |
|---|---|
| Spouse or legal partner | Marriage or registered partnership certificate required. |
| Children under 18 | Birth certificate required. |
| Children up to 24 | Must be financially dependent and enrolled in education. |
| Disabled children or dependents | No age limit if financially and medically dependent. |
| Parents or in-laws | Possible, but only in certain cases (financial dependency must be shown). |
Note that dependents do not need to make any additional investments, only the main applicant.
Applying for theInvestment Visa Brazil is straightforward when each stage is handled correctly. Below is the clear, investor-friendly process followed by most successful applicants:
Decide whether to pursue:
All investors must hold a CPF (tax registration number that doubles as personal identification), which is required for opening bank accounts, buying property, and completing official registrations.
Funds must be transferred from abroad to a Brazilian bank and registered with theBrazilian Central Bank (RDE-IED registration for foreign direct investment).
Typical documents include:
Apply through:
Once approved, you will receive visa authorization for entry and residency.
This final step of registering with theFederal Police of Brazil completes your legal residency process and grants your initial residency rights in Brazil.
TheInvestorVisa Braziloffers one of the region’s more efficient pathways to long-term residency. While processing time can vary depending on the consulate, completeness of documents, and investment type, most applicants can expect a smooth process when properly prepared.
Processing timeline:
1. Investment preparation and document gathering: 2 – 8 weeks
This includes opening a Brazilian bank account, obtaining a CPF (Brazil’s primary form of personal identification as well as tax registration number) , transferring funds, completing the investment (real estate purchase or business capitalization), and preparing the required documents for the application.
2. Submission to the Ministry of Justice or Brazilian Consulate:1 – 2 weeks
Applications may be filed in Brazil or at a consulate abroad, depending on the route chosen.
3. Application review and approval: 2 – 6 months
Most approvals fall within this window.
Business-related applications process slightly faster, while real estate cases may take additional time due to property verification and Central Bank registration.
4. Arrival in Brazil and biometric registration:1 – 3 weeks
After approval, applicants receive a visa authorization and must finalize their registration upon arrival, leading to the issuance of theirresidency card.
Total estimated timeframe: 3 – 8 months from start to finish for most investors.
Understanding the full cost of the Brazil Investment Visa is essential to budgeting your investment and residency strategy.
In addition to the required capital investment, applicants should consider government fees, legal assistance, and property/company-related expenses. Below is a breakdown of typical costs for both thereal estate andbusiness investment routes.
| Fee type | Main applicant | Per dependent | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Residence authorization (Ministry of Justice) | USD $200–400 | USD $200–400 | Paid during application submission |
| Consular visa issuance fee | USD $100–250 | USD $100–250 | Varies by consulate and nationality |
| Federal Police Registration & CRNM Card | USD $80–150 | USD $80–150 | Paid upon arrival in Brazil |
| Document apostille & sworn translation (approx.) | USD $300–800 | Included | Required for all foreign documents |
| Police clearance certificate | USD $30–60 | USD $30–60 | Must be issued within last 90 days |
Final amounts may slightly vary depending on the issuing country and consulate.
| Cost type | Estimated value |
|---|---|
| Property Transfer Tax (ITBI) | 2–4% of property value |
| Land registry & notary fees | 1–2% of property value |
| Due diligence & property valuation | USD $1,000–3,000 |
| Bank transfer & currency conversion fees | 0.5–1.5% of property value |
Total closing costs for real estate investors typically range between3% and 7% of the property value.
Most investors work with licensed immigration and real estate legal counsel to structure the investment, register funds correctly, and manage the residency application.
| Service | Estimated Cost |
|---|---|
| Immigration legal advisory and application management | USD $5,000 – $15,000 |
| Central Bank investment registration (RDE-IED) | Included or USD $500 – $1,500 |
| Business incorporation and tax registration (VIPER route) | USD $2,000 – $5,000 |
| Real estate due diligence and contract review (Golden Visa route | USD $1,500 – $4,000 |
Fees depend on family size, investment route, and legal complexity.
| Investment path | Minimum investment | Additional costs (fees, legal, taxes) | Estimated total starting from |
|---|---|---|---|
| Business VIPER – innovation / startup | BRL 150,000 | USD $8,000–15,000 | USD ~$40,000+ |
| Business VIPER – standard capital investment | BRL 500,000 | USD $10,000–18,000 | USD ~$120,000+ |
| Real estate (North/Northeast regions) | BRL 700,000 | 3–7% closing fees + legal support | USD ~$160,000+ |
| Real estate (urban regions) | BRL 1,000,000 | 3–7% closing fees + legal support | USD ~$230,000+ |
Family members are included in the same residency application without additional investment. Only government and administrative fees apply per dependent.
| Cost category | Main applicant | Family of 4 (spouse and 2 children) |
|---|---|---|
| Government and administrative fees | USD $600–1,200 | USD $1,800–3,200 |
| Legal support and application management | USD $5,000–15,000 | USD $7,000–18,000 |
| Property / business costs (due diligence, registry, taxes) | USD $3,000–10,000 | USD $4,000–12,000 |
| Estimated total (excluding investment) | USD $8,500–26,000 | USD $12,000–33,000 |
The Brazil Investment Visa is a direct pathway to long-term residency, permanent settlement, and eventual Brazilian citizenship, provided the qualifying investment is maintained and legal residence requirements are met. The road to citizenship is as follows:
| Residency stage | Real estate investment route | Business investment route |
|---|---|---|
| Initial residency | 2-year temporary residence permit. | Permanent residency granted from the start. |
| Upgrade to permanent residency | After 2 years (renewal and proof of maintained investment) | Not required (already permanent). |
| Minimum legal stay requirement | No minimum presence required for residency retention; but must renew after 2 years before transitioning | Must register biometrics once; no minimum stay requirement initially, but recommended to spend time in Brazil for citizenship eligibility later. |
| Eligible to apply for citizenship | After4 years of permanent residency (total 6 years from application), or faster if qualifying under special categories | After4 years of permanent residency (standard), or eligible sooner in special cases. |
Citizenship may be granted earlier (usually after1 to 2 years) if the investor:
| Fast-track category | Citizenship eligibility |
|---|---|
| Married to a Brazilian citizen | Eligible after1 year of permanent residency |
| Has a Brazilian-born child | Eligible after1 year |
| Has a Brazilian-born child | Eligible after2 year |
| Standard naturalization (no exemptions) | 4 yearsof permanent residency |
Once the Brazil permanent residency is granted, the holder is entitled to:
Brazil allowsdual citizenship in most cases. Investors can retain their original nationality when naturalizing as Brazilian citizens.
Global Citizen Solutions is a boutique migration consultancy firm with years of experience delivering bespoke residence and citizenship by investment solutions for international families. With offices worldwide and an experienced, hands-on team, we have helped hundreds of clients worldwideacquire citizenship, residence visas, or homes while diversifying their portfolios with robust investments.
We guide you from start to finish, taking you beyond your citizenship or residency by investment application.
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The minimum investment for the Investment Visa Brazil isBRL 500,000 for business projects orBRL 1,000,000 in real estate. In the North and Northeast, real estate qualifies fromBRL 700,000.
You must make a qualifying investment, prove legal source of funds, obtain a CPF, open a Brazilian bank account, register the investment, and submit all required documents.
Most applications are processed in3 to 8 months, depending on the investment type and consulate workload.
Yes. Business investors often receivepermanent residency immediately, while real estate investors start with temporary residency that can convert to permanent status.
Yes. Investors may apply forBrazilian citizenship after four years of permanent residency, with faster options for those with a Brazilian spouse or child.
Yes. Spouses, partners, and dependent children can be added to the same investment visa application.
Passport, police clearance, proof of funds, CPF, Brazilian bank account details, apostilled civil documents, and proof of investment (business plan or property deed).
Eligible investments includeurban residential or commercial real estate that meets the BRL 1,000,000 or BRL 700,000 thresholds.
Yes, aBRL 500,000 business investment (orBRL 150,000 for innovative startups) qualifies for the investor visa.
You must maintain a qualifying investment. Selling or withdrawing funds may affect your residency status unless another qualifying investment replaces it.
You can get Brazilian residency by investing in a business or real estate through the Brazilian Investor Visa. This residency enables foreign nationals to reside and work in Brazil, access public services, and apply for permanent residency and citizenship after completing the required legal residence period.
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