World Watch/Brazil/Starting a Business

Starting a Business · Brazil

Starting a Business - Brazil

ModerateCompany formation governed by the Civil Code (Lei 10.406/2002, sociedade limitada/LTDA) and Lei 6.404/1976 (S.A.); registration via state Boards of Trade (Juntas Comerciais) coordinated by DREI and the integrated REDESIM network; foreign capital registered with the Banco Central do Brasil (SCE-IED) and tax IDs issued by Receita Federal (CPF/CNPJ).

Brazil permits 100% foreign ownership of the most common vehicle, the limited liability company (LTDA), with no minimum capital requirement, but formation is a multi-agency, document-heavy process. Foreign partners must obtain a Brazilian tax ID (CPF), appoint a resident legal/attorney representative, and register inbound capital with the Central Bank, with end-to-end timelines typically running several weeks. Sector-specific restrictions apply in areas such as media, rural border-zone land, nuclear and aerospace.

100% foreign ownership allowed

An LTDA can be fully foreign-owned with no requirement for a Brazilian partner, and there is no statutory minimum share capital for the LTDA.

Tax ID and resident representative required

Every foreign partner must hold a Brazilian individual tax ID (CPF), and a foreign-resident shareholder/quotaholder must appoint a representative resident in Brazil; foreign-owned companies also need a local administrator/attorney.

Integrated registration via REDESIM

Setup runs through the REDESIM network and the state integrator: name/viability check, registration of articles of incorporation with the Junta Comercial (assigning the NIRE), automatic issuance of the CNPJ by Receita Federal, then state/municipal tax registrations and licenses.

Central Bank registration of foreign capital

Inbound foreign direct investment must be declared by the Brazilian recipient company in the Central Bank's SCE-IED system (formerly RDE-IED), required for currency conversion, profit/capital repatriation and dividend remittance abroad.

Sector-specific foreign-investment limits

Foreign capital faces caps or bans in some sectors: journalism and broadcasting limited to 30% voting/equity capital, foreign acquisition of rural land and border-zone properties is restricted/requires authorization, and nuclear, postal and aerospace activities are reserved or barred.

Typical timeline of several weeks

Junta Comercial approval commonly takes around 5-15 business days, but the full path from obtaining a CPF to an operational CNPJ with licenses typically takes roughly 30-45 business days depending on state and activity.

Machine-assisted translation · verified 5/23/2026 · orientation, not legal advice. English version →