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Brazil Plans to Tax Crypto Transactions for Cross-Border Payments

Brazil Plans to Tax Crypto Transactions for Cross-Border Payments

2025-11-19

Brazil

  • Brazil aims to tax crypto used in international payments.
  • Stablecoins are the main focus of the new rules.
  • The goal is to close regulatory gaps and boost government revenue.
  • The central bank treats stablecoins as foreign-exchange operations.

Brazil is preparing to tax certain cryptocurrency transactions used for cross-border payments. Officials familiar with the discussions say the plan targets a gap in the current financial transaction tax system.

At present, crypto operations are exempt from the IOF tax, which applies to most foreign-exchange transfers. Investors still pay income tax on capital gains above a monthly exemption. While the Finance Ministry has not confirmed the plans, sources indicate the focus is on stablecoins and other virtual assets that the central bank now treats like foreign currency.

The policy is expected to serve two purposes. First, it would bring emerging crypto payment channels under regulation. Second, it could generate substantial revenue for the government. Brazil continues to face fiscal pressures and is exploring ways to secure additional public funds.

Also Read: Mt. Gox Moves $936 Million in Bitcoin After Eight Months of Inactivity

Stablecoins Drive Brazil Crypto Market

The Brazilian cryptocurrency market has rapidly expanded over the past few years because of the involvement of the stablecoin group of cryptocurrencies. These new forms of currency remain fixed on conventional currencies such as the U.S. dollar.

According to federal tax records, the value of transactions involving cryptocurrency on the Brazilian markets in the first half of this year reached 227 billion reais (~$42.8 billion), an increase of 20% over the preceding year. Two-thirds of these transactions involved USDT, the dollar-backed stablecoin of the company Tether; only 11% of the transactions involved Bitcoin.

The central bank’s new framework aims to make sure stablecoins don’t bypass foreign-exchange rules. Officials worry that these tokens are increasingly used for payments rather than investments, raising potential money-laundering concerns.

Tax Authority Defines Reporting Obligations Clearly

Under rules taking effect in February, the central bank will treat stablecoin transactions as foreign-exchange operations. This covers buying, selling, exchanging stablecoins, sending international payments, settling card transactions, and moving assets to self-custody wallets.

While this classification doesn’t automatically trigger taxes, separate guidance from the federal tax authority will set out the exact obligations. The requirements of reporting by foreign crypto service providers operating in Brazil have continued to improve.

Officials estimate that unreported crypto transfers may be costing the government over $30 billion a year in lost import duties and taxes. The application of the IOF tax on international cryptocurrency transactions should help the country regain lost tax revenue that fell through the cracks of the digital age.

Also Read: WisdomTree launches Stellar ETP, XLM targets $0.36

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