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Dec 10, 2025

Emergency Funding Restarts Passport Printing, Easing Brazil’s Backlog

Emergency Funding Restarts Passport Printing, Easing Brazil’s Backlog
After three anxious weeks in which new Brazilian passports could not be issued, the Ministry of Finance authorised an emergency credit of R$37.4 million on 8 December, allowing the Federal Police and the state-owned Casa da Moeda mint to resume production. The shutdown—triggered when the PF exhausted its 2025 budget line for the Passport & Traffic-Control System on 19 November—had stalled roughly 25,000 applications per day and threatened Christmas-season travel.

Business groups were particularly vocal: oil-and-gas contractors rotating through Macaé, IT consultants flying to North America and Europe, and multinationals planning January kick-off meetings all reported critical trips at risk. Several firms resorted to costly routings through neighbouring consulates to secure laissez-passer documents for key staff.

The stop-gap funding covers blank-booklet production and overtime for PF clerks through year-end, but officials admit that a structural fix is still needed. Congress must approve an additional R$97.5 million in early 2026 to avoid a repeat. In the meantime, the PF has begun clearing the estimated 400,000-document backlog, prioritising medical, study-abroad and corporate-assignment cases.

Emergency Funding Restarts Passport Printing, Easing Brazil’s Backlog


Whether you’re among the travellers caught in the backlog or a mobility manager looking to avoid future headaches, VisaHQ can step in as a reliable partner. Through its Brazil portal (https://www.visahq.com/brazil/), the service offers real-time updates on requirements, expedited appointment scheduling and nationwide courier options—helping individuals and companies keep critical trips on track even when official channels falter.

Travel managers should expect processing to normalise gradually over the next two weeks, but urgent departures will remain challenging. Experts recommend that executives check passport validity now—Brazil requires six months’ validity to enter many destinations—and submit renewals well before the traditional January rush.

For global-mobility programmes, the episode is a cautionary tale: even outbound documentation can derail assignments, and contingency planning (including holding second passports where lawful) is once again on the agenda.
VisaHQ's expert visas and immigration team helps individuals and companies navigate global travel, work, and residency requirements. We handle document preparation, application filings, government agencies coordination, every aspect necessary to ensure fast, compliant, and stress-free approvals.
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