Bringing goods into Brazil: the USD 1,000 allowance nobody respects (and the 50% tax that hits travelers who get checked) — cover image

Bringing goods into Brazil: the USD 1,000 allowance nobody respects (and the 50% tax that hits travelers who get checked)

Brazil's Receita Federal (federal tax authority) grants a USD 1,000 per-person allowance for arrivals by air. Travelers who exceed it and fail to declare pay a 50% tax on the excess, plus a 50% penalty on top of the tax. Here is the real math, the e-DBV form, and what changes between the green and red customs channels.

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Curadoria VoysparkbyCuradoria Voyspark May 13, 2026 15 min Updated on June 03, 2026

Brazil's traveler allowance is USD 1,000 by air, USD 500 by land. Anyone exceeding this must file the e-DBV and pay 50% tax on the excess. Whoever fails to declare and gets caught pays the same tax plus a 50% penalty on top. Enforcement is lower than it seems, but it exists — and it is expensive. Here is what counts, what does not, and how to avoid being the unlucky one of the day.

15 min read

Brazil's USD 1,000 allowance has been frozen since 2014 and never adjusted. After 12 years of dollar inflation and product price increases, it has become fiction. An iPhone 16 Pro, a perfume, and a pair of sneakers already blow past it. The Receita Federal knows. Travelers know. Even so, most people walk through the green channel and hope.

The "hope and walk" math works most of the time. But when it does not, the cost is steep. It is not only the 50% tax — there is seizure, a two-hour line, and the extra 50% penalty on top. This article breaks down every number, every rule, and what really happens when the red light comes on.

The rule is old, enforcement has become more sophisticated, and the public cases of 2025 made it clear that no one is special — YouTuber, model, or executive, everyone pays the same.


What the duty-free allowance is and what it covers today

TL;DRThe allowance is the value of goods you can bring into Brazil from abroad without paying tax. It applies per person, per trip, and depends on how you enter the country. Entry mode Allowance per person Arrival duty-free allowance --- --- --- Air USD 1,000 USD 1,000 Sea USD 1,000 USD 1,000 Land USD 500 — River /.

The allowance is the value of goods you can bring into Brazil from abroad without paying tax. It applies per person, per trip, and depends on how you enter the country.

Entry mode Allowance per person Arrival duty-free allowance
Air USD 1,000 USD 1,000
Sea USD 1,000 USD 1,000
Land USD 500
River / lake USD 500

The allowance is personal and non-transferable. A couple cannot pool theirs to buy an USD 1,800 Rolex. Each person has their own USD 1,000, and the watch, if it is in one person's name, belongs to that person. The customs officer will not accept "half of it is my husband's."

Anyone who uses the allowance must wait 30 days between trips to reuse it. Business travelers who fly weekly do not get a fresh allowance every trip. That is another detail nobody reads.


What counts as taxable baggage (and what does not)

TL;DRThis is where the practical margin lives. The Receita Federal separates personal use from new merchandise. Not in the allowance (personal use): Clothing and shoes you are wearing, or with obvious signs of use (tag removed, wear marks). Jewelry and watches you boarded wearing — you must prove with a prior photo or a Brazilian purchase invoice.

This is where the practical margin lives. The Receita Federal separates personal use from new merchandise.

Not in the allowance (personal use):

  • Clothing and shoes you are wearing, or with obvious signs of use (tag removed, wear marks).
  • Jewelry and watches you boarded wearing — you must prove with a prior photo or a Brazilian purchase invoice.
  • Laptop, tablet, camera, drone, headphones you took with you — carry the Brazilian invoice or get a Goods Departure Certificate (DSB) on the way out.
  • Personal-use medication (with prescription, in compatible quantities).
  • Books, magazines, printed material.

In the allowance (taxable):

  • New electronics in the box (iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch, MacBook, console).
  • Perfumes, cosmetics, supplements, vitamins.
  • New bags, wallets, sunglasses, watches.
  • Tagged, still-packaged clothing and sneakers.
  • Toys, gifts, any "new" item.
  • Alcohol above the limit (12 liters total, with per-type sub-limits).

The blind spot that catches people: imported supplements. Large bottles of vitamin D, whey, creatine, omega 3 — they look "for me," but in commercial quantities they become merchandise. The Receita uses common sense, but common sense varies by officer.

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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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