---
title: "Brazil Visa Fee Changes 2026: Every Fee, Verified"
description: "Every Brazil visa fee that changed in 2026, verified: the $80.90 eVisa, EUR 120 consular fees, R$372.90 MigranteWeb government costs, and what stayed the same."
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og_title: "Brazil Visa Fee Changes 2026: Every Fee, Verified"
og_description: "Every Brazil visa fee that changed in 2026, verified: the $80.90 eVisa, EUR 120 consular fees, R$372.90 MigranteWeb government costs, and what stayed the same."
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crawl_date: 2026-07-09
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---
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Fees & Costs

# Every Brazil Visa Fee That Changed in 2026 (and What Did Not)

Camila Araujo Mota, OAB Attorney

13 min read

Published July 8, 2026 (updated as fees move)

## Quick AnswerWhat Brazil's visa fees actually are in 2026

Brazil's core visa fees did not increase in 2026. The in-country MigranteWeb route still costs **R$372.90 in government fees** (R$168.13 processing + R$204.77 CRNM card), for a typical all-in total of **$400 to $600**. The consulate route still charges **US$290 for US citizens** (about **EUR 120** at most European consulates after 2026 currency conversions), for a typical all-in total of **$433 to $1,159**. The **US$80.90 eVisa** for US, Canadian, and Australian tourists remains in force. The overstay fine (R$100/day, R$10,000 cap) and the US$1,500/month income requirement are unchanged.

Every January, articles appear claiming Brazil "doubled" its visa fees or invented new charges. In 2026 the rumors got louder because two real things happened around the same time: European consulates updated their euro fee conversions, and low quality news aggregators published fabricated stories about an eVisa expansion to France and 20 other countries. This post is the change log: every fee touching the [Brazil Digital Nomad Visa (VITEM XIV)](/brazil-digital-nomad-visa) and Brazilian entry in 2026, what each cost in 2025, what it costs now, and the primary source for each number. For the full itemized budget (translations, apostilles, insurance, professional fees), see our evergreen [Brazil Digital Nomad Visa cost guide](/brazil-digital-nomad-visa-cost-2026); this article is its companion, tracking only what moved.

## The 2026 Fee Table: 2025 vs 2026, Line by Line

Here is every government fee relevant to remote workers and visitors, verified in July 2026 against the Federal Police fee page, the consular fee table annexed to Portaria MRE 602/2025, and the official eVisa portal. Full source links are in the [Sources section](#sources) at the end.

| Fee | 2025 value | 2026 value | Who pays it | Source |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
| Brazil eVisa (visitor entry) | US$80.90 (required since Apr 10, 2025) | US$80.90 (unchanged, still in force) | US, Canadian, Australian passport holders entering as tourists | brazil.vfsevisa.com (official portal) |
| VITEM XIV consular fee, US citizens | US$290 (reciprocity rate) | US$290 (unchanged; table re-issued by Portaria MRE 602/2025) | US applicants filing at a consulate abroad | Portaria MRE 602/2025, Annex I |
| VITEM XIV consular fee, European consulates | Approx. EUR 100 to 110 (local conversion) | Approx. EUR 120 (about US$130) after conversion updates | EU and other non-reciprocity applicants at consulates | The Rio Times (2026 reporting); Portaria MRE 602/2025 |
| Residence authorization processing (GRU, code 140066) | R$168.13 | R$168.13 (unchanged) | In-country MigranteWeb applicants | Polícia Federal fee page (gov.br) |
| CRNM card issuance (GRU, code 140120) | R$204.77 | R$204.77 (unchanged) | Every approved applicant registering with the Federal Police | Polícia Federal fee page (gov.br) |
| Overstay fine | R$100/day, capped at R$10,000 | R$100/day, capped at R$10,000 (unchanged) | Anyone who overstays their authorized period | Lei 13.445/2017, Article 109 |
| CPF (Brazilian tax ID) | Free | Free (unchanged) | All applicants (needed for MigranteWeb and banking) | Receita Federal |

Read the table honestly and the headline writes itself: in a year full of "Brazil visa fees explode" content, the only genuine movement was a currency conversion adjustment at European consulates. Everything else is a 2025 fee still in force, or a fee that has not moved in years.

## Consular Fees: What Actually Moved in 2026

Brazilian consular fees are not set in dollars or euros. They are set in a reference unit in the Tabela de Emolumentos Consulares (TEC), the fee schedule attached to the Migration Law and periodically re-issued by the Foreign Ministry. The current schedule is **Portaria MRE 602 of May 8, 2025** (in force since May 12, 2025, replacing Portaria 480/2023). Under it, the standard fee for most temporary visa categories, including the VITEM XIV, is **100 fee units**, historically equivalent to about US$100.

Two things layer on top of that base number:

-   **Reciprocity rates.** Because the United States charges Brazilians higher visa fees, Brazil charges US citizens a matching premium: **US$290 for the VITEM XIV** (290 units, listed explicitly in Annex I of Portaria 602/2025). This did not change in 2026. It has been the US rate for years.
-   **Local currency conversion.** Each consulate publishes the fee schedule converted into local currency and updates the conversion as exchange rates move. This is where the 2026 "increase" comes from: reporting from The Rio Times in mid 2026 puts VITEM issuance at European consulates at **around EUR 120, roughly US$130**, up from the EUR 100 to 110 range applicants commonly saw before. The statutory fee is identical; the euro price of it drifted upward.

Pro tip: Always check the fee page of your specific consulate the week you book your appointment, not a third party site. Conversions differ between consulates in the same country and are updated without announcement. The consulate's published local currency figure is the only number that matters on appointment day.

One more consular shift worth knowing about, even though it is not a fee: 2026 reporting indicates consulates are scrutinizing freelancers harder, asking for contracts of six months or longer and proof of a registered foreign business. Salaried remote employees face lighter document demands. If you freelance, budget time (not just money) for assembling a stronger evidence file.

## The eVisa in 2026: US$80.90, Still in Force, Still Only Three Countries

Brazil reinstated its visa requirement for US, Canadian, and Australian tourists on **April 10, 2025**, delivered as an eVisa through the official portal at brazil.vfsevisa.com. The fee is **US$80.90** (US$80 visa fee plus a US$0.90 platform service charge). For US citizens the eVisa is valid for **10 years** with multiple entries; for Canadians and Australians it is valid for 5 years. Each entry allows up to 90 days as a visitor. Nothing about the fee, the validity, or the platform changed in 2026: the requirement simply remains in force.

Why does this belong in a digital nomad fee change log? Because the eVisa is a separate cost from the visa itself. A US citizen who flies to Brazil as a tourist and then applies for the VITEM XIV in country through MigranteWeb pays the US$80.90 eVisa to board the plane, then the Brazilian government fees after arrival. The eVisa is never credited against the VITEM XIV fee. If you are weighing the two documents against each other, our comparison of the [Brazil eVisa vs the Digital Nomad Visa for US citizens](/brazil-evisa-vs-digital-nomad-visa-for-us-citizens) walks through exactly when each one is the right tool.

The genuine eVisa developments in the 2025 to 2026 window were narrower than the viral coverage suggested: Brazil extended **business category** eVisas to Indian nationals (October 2025) and Chinese nationals (January 2026), and after Mexico reinstated its own electronic visa for Brazilians on February 5, 2026, Brazil announced a reciprocal eVisa for Mexican citizens that had not entered into force as of this writing. Visitor eVisas still apply to exactly three nationalities: the United States, Canada, and Australia.

Important: Several aggregator sites published stories in early 2026 claiming Brazil now requires eVisas from French, Mexican, and "20+ other" nationalities. We could not verify this against any official source. The official eVisa portal and Brazil's published visa policy show French citizens remain visa exempt and no Mexican requirement is in force as of July 2026. Do not pay a third party site for an "eVisa" your nationality does not need.

## MigranteWeb and Federal Police Fees: R$372.90, Unchanged

The in-country route, applying through the Ministry of Justice's MigranteWeb portal after arriving in Brazil, carries two federal fees, both paid by GRU (Guia de Recolhimento da União) and both confirmed on the Federal Police fee page:

-   **R$168.13**: processing and evaluation of the residence authorization request (revenue code 140066), paid when you file.
-   **R$204.77**: issuance of the CRNM, the physical migrant registration card (revenue code 140120), paid when you register with the Federal Police after approval.

Total: **R$372.90, roughly US$73** at mid 2026 exchange rates. Neither amount changed on January 1, 2026, or at any point in 2025. The Federal Police page listing them has not been revised since 2020. Applicants sometimes report the numbers as "new 2026 fees" because they encounter them for the first time, or because an article quotes only one of the two and a correction later adds the other, reading like an increase. There are two fees. There have been two fees for years. Consulate route applicants do not escape the second one either: everyone who lands in Brazil on a VITEM XIV must register with the Federal Police within 90 days and pay the R$204.77 CRNM fee. Our [CRNM Federal Police registration guide](/brazil-digital-nomad-visa-rnm-federal-police) covers that appointment step by step.

Pro tip: Paying a GRU from a foreign card or bank typically adds a 3 to 5 percent conversion markup. If you are already in Brazil, pay through a Brazilian account or a low fee multicurrency service. And if you are filing through MigranteWeb yourself, our [MigranteWeb step by step walkthrough](/vitem-xiv-migranteweb-step-by-step) shows exactly where in the flow each GRU is generated, in a portal that only exists in Portuguese.

## What Did NOT Change in 2026

A fee change log is only trustworthy if it also states what stayed put. These are the figures that viral posts most often claim were "updated for 2026" and were not:

-   **The income requirement: US$1,500 per month or US$18,000 in savings.** Resolution CNIg 45/2021 has not been amended. Any article citing a higher 2026 threshold is wrong.
-   **Visa validity: 1 year, renewable once for a second year.** The VITEM XIV remains a temporary visa capped at two years total; it is not a path to permanent residency by itself.
-   **The overstay fine: R$100 per day, capped at R$10,000.** Set by Article 109 of Lei 13.445/2017 and unchanged since the law took effect in 2017.
-   **The CRNM registration deadline: 90 days** from entry (consulate route) or from publication of the approval (in-country route).
-   **The CPF: free.** Brazil's tax ID has been issuable online at no cost through the Receita Federal since October 2023.
-   **Health insurance rules by path.** Insurance remains required for consulate applications and is not required (though recommended) for in-country MigranteWeb applications under Resolution 45/2021.

One adjacent money change is real and works in applicants' favor: Brazil's 2026 income tax reform (Lei 15.270/2025, effective January 1, 2026) made monthly income up to R$5,000 fully exempt from IRPF, with a partial rebate up to R$7,350. For nomads who cross the 183 day threshold and become Brazilian tax residents, the cost of that status dropped meaningfully this year. The details are in our [Brazil digital nomad tax guide](/blog/brazil-digital-nomad-tax-guide-2026).

## Rumors We Checked and Dropped

In researching this change log we ran down every 2026 fee claim circulating in nomad groups and AI generated news sites. These did not survive contact with primary sources:

-   **"Brazil extended the eVisa to France, Mexico, and 20+ countries in 2026."** False as of July 2026. French citizens remain visa exempt; the Mexican requirement is announced but not in force; the official portal lists visitor eVisas for the US, Canada, and Australia only.
-   **"A new VFSeVisa platform launched February 5, 2026."** Conflation. February 5, 2026 is the date Mexico reinstated its own eVisa for Brazilian travelers. Brazil's eVisa portal has operated at brazil.vfsevisa.com since the April 2025 reinstatement.
-   **"The CRNM fee rose to R$204.77 on January 1, 2026."** False. R$204.77 is the long standing CRNM issuance fee, stable on the Federal Police fee table for years. Nothing rose.
-   **"The digital nomad income requirement increased for 2026."** False. US$1,500 per month, per Resolution 45/2021, unamended.

The pattern behind most of these is the same: an aggregator republishes a real event (a Mexican policy, a currency conversion, a fee seen for the first time) with the country or the direction of change garbled, and the error propagates. When a fee claim matters to your budget, trace it to a gov.br page or the Diário Oficial da União before acting on it.

## What the Visa Actually Costs in Total in 2026

Putting the unchanged fees together, the two application routes land where they did last year:

-   **Consulate route:** US$290 visa fee for US citizens (about EUR 120 at most European consulates) plus background check, apostilles, translations where required, and health insurance. Typical all-in range: **$433 to $1,159**.
-   **MigranteWeb route:** R$372.90 (about US$73) in government fees plus apostilled background check and sworn translations. Typical all-in range: **$400 to $600**. Insurance is not required on this path, though we recommend carrying coverage.

The line item by line item breakdown, including where each document cost varies by nationality, lives in the [full 2026 cost guide](/brazil-digital-nomad-visa-cost-2026). If you want professional eyes on your file before you pay any non refundable government fee, GetBrazilVisa's services are flat rate and unchanged in 2026: the **Quick Double-Check is $250** and the **Full Service is $599**. A single rejected filing costs more than either in lost fees and repeated document runs.

## Frequently Asked Questions

### Did Brazil digital nomad visa fees increase in 2026?

The statutory government fees did not increase. The consular fee table (Portaria MRE 602/2025) keeps the VITEM XIV base fee at 100 fee units (roughly US$100) with a US$290 reciprocity fee for US citizens, and the in-country MigranteWeb fees remain R$168.13 plus R$204.77. What moved is the local currency conversion at European consulates, where the VITEM fee now runs about EUR 120.

### How much is the Brazil eVisa in 2026?

The Brazil eVisa costs US$80.90 (US$80 visa fee plus a US$0.90 service charge), applied for through the official portal at brazil.vfsevisa.com. It is valid for 10 years for US citizens and 5 years for Canadians and Australians, with stays of up to 90 days per entry.

### Do French citizens need a visa or eVisa for Brazil in 2026?

No. French citizens remain visa exempt for stays of up to 90 days. Reports circulating in early 2026 that Brazil extended its eVisa requirement to France and 20+ other countries are not supported by any official source: the official eVisa portal lists only the United States, Canada, and Australia for visitor eVisas.

### Do Mexican citizens need a Brazilian eVisa in 2026?

Not yet as of July 2026. After Mexico reinstated its electronic visa for Brazilian nationals on February 5, 2026, Brazil announced it would implement a reciprocal eVisa for Mexican citizens, but no start date or fee has been published. Mexican travelers should confirm current rules on the official portal before booking.

### What is the total government fee for applying via MigranteWeb in 2026?

R$372.90, roughly US$73. That is the R$168.13 residence authorization processing fee (GRU revenue code 140066) plus the R$204.77 CRNM card issuance fee (code 140120). Both amounts are unchanged from 2025 and are confirmed on the Federal Police fee page.

### Is the R$204.77 CRNM fee new in 2026?

No. R$204.77 has been the CRNM card issuance fee for years; the Federal Police fee table listing it has not been revised since 2020. Some 2026 articles present it as a new charge because they confuse it with the separate R$168.13 processing fee. Both fees exist, both are due on the in-country route, and neither changed.

### How much do US citizens pay for the VITEM XIV at a consulate in 2026?

US$290, the reciprocity based consular fee for most VITEM categories including VITEM XIV, confirmed in the fee table annexed to Portaria MRE 602/2025. The US$80.90 eVisa is a separate document for tourist entry and is not credited against the VITEM XIV fee.

### Why do European consulates now charge about EUR 120 for the VITEM XIV?

Consular fees are set in a reference unit (100 units for the standard VITEM fee) and each consulate publishes a local currency conversion that it updates periodically. Reporting from The Rio Times in 2026 puts the euro conversion at around EUR 120, roughly US$130. The underlying statutory fee did not change; the conversion did.

### Did the $1,500 income requirement change in 2026?

No. Resolution CNIg 45/2021 still requires proof of at least US$1,500 per month in foreign source income or US$18,000 in available savings. Viral claims of a higher 2026 threshold have no basis in any published resolution.

### Did Brazil's overstay fine change in 2026?

No. The fine remains R$100 per day of overstay, capped at R$10,000, under Article 109 of the Migration Law (Lei 13.445/2017). The cap has not been adjusted since the law took effect in 2017.

### Are Brazilian government visa fees refundable if my application is rejected?

No. The R$168.13 GRU payment, the R$204.77 CRNM fee, consular visa fees, and the US$80.90 eVisa fee are all non refundable regardless of outcome. A rejected application means paying the government again on resubmission, which is why a document review before filing usually pays for itself.

### Is the Brazil eVisa the same as the digital nomad visa?

No. The eVisa is a tourist entry document for US, Canadian, and Australian passport holders. The VITEM XIV digital nomad visa is a one year residence visa for remote workers. A US citizen who flies to Brazil to apply in country needs the eVisa first, then files the VITEM XIV application through MigranteWeb after arrival.

### Will Brazil visa fees change again later in 2026?

Possibly. Consular fee conversions are updated by each consulate as exchange rates move, and Federal Police fees can be adjusted by interministerial portaria published in the Diário Oficial da União. This page is a maintained change log: we update it when any figure moves, so the date at the top reflects the last verification.

## Sources

Every figure in this article traces to one of the following:

-   [Polícia Federal, immigration fee table (gov.br)](https://www.gov.br/pf/pt-br/assuntos/imigracao/card/taxas): R$168.13 processing fee (code 140066) and R$204.77 CRNM issuance fee (code 140120)
-   [Portaria MRE 602/2025, Tabela de Emolumentos Consulares](https://www.legisweb.com.br/legislacao/?id=477906): 100 unit base fee for VITEM categories, US$290 US reciprocity rate for VITEM XIV
-   [Brazil eVisa official portal (VFS Global)](https://brazil.vfsevisa.com): US$80.90 fee, eligible nationalities, validity periods
-   [US Embassy in Brazil, visitor visa requirement notice](https://br.usembassy.gov/message-to-u-s-citizens-new-visitor-visa-requirements-for-u-s-citizens-traveling-to-brazil/): April 10, 2025 reinstatement for US citizens
-   [The Rio Times, "Brazil's Nomad Visa Gets Tougher for Freelancers" (2026)](https://www.riotimesonline.com/brazil-nomad-visa-freelancers-2026/): EUR 120 consular issuance figure and 2026 freelancer documentation trends
-   [The Rio Times, Brazil Immigration Guide 2026](https://www.riotimesonline.com/brazil-immigration-visa-guide-2026/): US$290 to $305 US consular range, EU national fee ranges
-   [Lei 13.445/2017 (Migration Law), Article 109](https://www.planalto.gov.br/ccivil_03/_ato2015-2018/2017/lei/l13445.htm): R$100/day overstay fine, R$10,000 cap
-   [Portal de Imigração (Ministry of Justice)](https://portaldeimigracao.mj.gov.br): Resolution CNIg 45/2021 income requirement and MigranteWeb procedures
-   [Receita Federal](https://www.gov.br/receitafederal/pt-br): free CPF issuance; Lei 15.270/2025 IRPF exemption bands effective January 1, 2026

This page is maintained as a change log. When any Brazilian visa fee moves, we update the table above and the date in the header. Figures last verified July 8, 2026.

### Not sure which fees apply to your case? Ask Camila.

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She was very professional and even when I had to delay my arrival she accomodated and made sure I was taken care of. From preparing my documents to getting my Brazilian ID card, she helped me with every step. Thank you!"},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":5,"bestRating":5},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"Ali Benslimane"},"reviewBody":"Camila at Get Brazil Visa was very attentive and helped me move from Miami to Brazil on the Digital Nomad Visa as part of her Full Service package. Highly recommend to anyone looking for a specialist in this visa specifically to make the move to Brazil."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":5,"bestRating":5},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"Mehdi Bouabbane"},"reviewBody":"Can't recommend Camila enough. You can tell she genuinely knows Brazilian immigration law, not just the basics. She caught that my proof of income letter was missing a specific clause the consulate requires and had me fix it before submitting — I never would've caught that on my own. Incredibly professional from start to finish. Already told everyone in my coworking space in Pipa about her."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":5,"bestRating":5},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"Arthur Ampen"},"reviewBody":"Camila made the digital nomad visa process painless. I shopped around a few immigration lawyers before hiring her and she was easily the most affordable — and honestly the most knowledgeable too. One other firm quoted me nearly double for basically the same service. Approved in about three weeks and I'm now set up in Rio de Janeiro. Worth every penny."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":5,"bestRating":5},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"Seth Rush"},"reviewBody":"I can’t recommend Camila highly enough. 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Camila genuinely cares about her clients and stands with you every step of the way. 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