Brazil is reportedly considering imposing taxes on cryptocurrencies used for international payments. The move forms part of the country’s efforts to close regulatory gaps, align with global tax reporting standards, and potentially increase public revenue.
Brazil’s Federal Revenue Service recently announced that it would bring its crypto-asset transaction reporting in line with international tax frameworks.
According to an exclusive Reuters report citing “officials with direct knowledge of the discussions,” Brazil is weighing the introduction of taxes on the use of cryptocurrencies for cross-border payments. The sources, who requested anonymity, said the government is trying to close gaps in its existing levy on foreign-exchange transactions.
Brazil’s Finance Ministry is reportedly considering expanding the Imposto sobre Operações Financeiras (IOF)—the federal tax applied to financial operations such as foreign exchange, credit, and insurance—to include certain international transfers made using digital assets, including stablecoins.
Earlier this month, the Brazilian central bank released long-awaited rules governing the trading of virtual assets, including cryptocurrencies. The new framework will extend existing anti-money-laundering regulations to virtual-asset service providers. Under these rules, any sale, purchase, or exchange of virtual assets pegged to fiat currencies—such as stablecoins—will be classified as a foreign-exchange transaction.
At present, cryptocurrencies are exempt from the IOF tax, though investors must still pay a flat 17.5% rate on capital gains from crypto-assets. The central bank’s new rules are set to take effect in February 2027.
Reuters’s sources said the proposed tax changes aim not only to close loopholes in Brazil’s current framework but also to increase government revenue. IOF-exempt cryptocurrencies, particularly stablecoins, are often used as substitutes for traditional foreign exchange while avoiding the taxes normally applied to such transactions.
The new rules are intended to “ensure that the use of stablecoins does not create regulatory arbitrage vis-à-vis the traditional foreign-exchange market,” one source told Reuters.
The report comes shortly after Brazil’s Federal Revenue Service announced that it will align its reporting requirements for crypto-asset transactions with the global Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF). This alignment will allow Brazilian authorities to access information on citizens’ offshore crypto accounts.
The news follows reports that the White House is reviewing a proposal from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to join CARF as well.
Disclaimer: This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.


