Every international card purchase is a simplified FX operation. The 3.5% IOF tax is already withheld on the statement. Income tax is a different story: it depends on whether it was consumption or a durable good, whether it exceeded R$ 5,000 per item, and when the statement was paid. Here's what Receita cross-checks, what you must declare in 2027 (base year 2026), and the mistakes that flood the audit queue every year.
16 min read
Every time you swipe your Brazilian credit card in Lisbon, New York or Tokyo, the issuing bank performs a simplified FX operation in the background. That operation is recorded, taxed with IOF and reported to Receita Federal by the bank. You don't see any of it — you only see the BRL amount on the statement. But Receita sees everything.
That's where the confusion starts. Many people think "if I paid IOF, it's done, no need to declare". Half wrong. IOF is a tax on financial operations (withheld at source), and income tax is on assets and income. Two different beasts. You may have paid IOF and still need to declare the purchase on the DIRPF — not to pay more tax, but to justify where the money came from and what entered your assets.
The thesis of this article is simple: declaring international card purchases is less about paying more tax and more about not raising red flags in Receita's cross-check system. Those who get the logic spend half an hour filling it out correctly and sleep soundly.
How the card's FX operation works
TL;DREach foreign purchase on a Brazilian card goes through three layers: Network (Visa, Mastercard, Elo) — converts the local currency to US dollars using its internal rate on the day. Issuing bank (Itaú, Nubank, C6, Inter) — converts USD to BRL using the Central Bank's PTAX selling rate of the purchase date, and adds the 3.5% IOF.
Each foreign purchase on a Brazilian card goes through three layers:
- Network (Visa, Mastercard, Elo) — converts the local currency to US dollars using its internal rate on the day.
- Issuing bank (Itaú, Nubank, C6, Inter) — converts USD to BRL using the Central Bank's PTAX selling rate of the purchase date, and adds the 3.5% IOF.
- Receita Federal — receives a monthly record via DECRED with the total BRL amount you moved on international cards.
What matters for the DIRPF is the final BRL value on the statement, on the purchase date. If you bought a USD 1,200 watch on October 15, 2026, that day's PTAX defines the BRL value — not the PTAX of the statement payment date, nor that of December 31.
PTAX is public and searchable on the Central Bank's site. Save a screenshot of the statement: it already shows the converted value, and that serves as documentary proof.
IOF: what's already paid and what changed in 2026
TL;DRSince July 2025, after the Supreme Court reinstated Decree 12,499/2025, the IOF on FX operations for individuals was unified at 3.5% for most operations: Operation IOF rate --- --- International credit card purchase 3.5% International debit card purchase 3.5% International prepaid card (load) 3.5% Currency purchase in cash 3.5% Remittance to own account abroad 3.5% Travel money (traveler's.
Since July 2025, after the Supreme Court reinstated Decree 12,499/2025, the IOF on FX operations for individuals was unified at 3.5% for most operations:
| Operation | IOF rate |
|---|---|
| International credit card purchase | 3.5% |
| International debit card purchase | 3.5% |
| International prepaid card (load) | 3.5% |
| Currency purchase in cash | 3.5% |
| Remittance to own account abroad | 3.5% |
| Travel money (traveler's check) | 3.5% |
This IOF is withheld at source by the issuing bank and appears line by line on the statement, or consolidated at the bottom. You don't need to fill out a DARF, don't need to record it as tax paid, don't need to do anything. Done.
What you do need to do is keep the statement. If Receita questions you, the statement proves what the operation was, what FX rate was used, and how much IOF was collected.

About the author
Curadoria Voyspark
2 years in the Voyspark editorial team
Time editorial da Voyspark — escritores, repórteres, fotógrafos e fixers em Lisboa, Tóquio, Nova York, Cidade do México e Marrakech. Coletivo. Sem voz corporativa. Cada peça com checagem cruzada por um editor regional e um chef ou curador local.
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