
Signed in Asunción on 17 January and published on 18 January, the provisional EU–Mercosur Association Agreement finally moves beyond tariff headlines to unveil a modern mobility chapter. The text harmonises definitions for business visitors, intra-corporate transferees and contractual service suppliers, granting stays of up to 90 days per entry (extendable to 180 days per year) without triggering local work-permit rules.
Once ratified by the European Parliament and Mercosur legislatures—earliest late 2026—the chapter will oblige member states to issue priority visas and residence permits within 30 days for qualifying executives. It also creates a joint committee to troubleshoot consular bottlenecks, a first for an EU trade pact with Latin America.
For companies looking for practical support as these new procedures roll out, VisaHQ’s specialists can coordinate both EU and Brazilian visa applications, track priority processing windows and pre-check documentation before submission. Their dedicated Brazil page (https://www.visahq.com/brazil/) summarises current requirements and lets corporate travel managers place consolidated orders online—keeping HR teams compliant while the agreement is phased in.
Brazilian subsidiaries of European multinationals stand to gain: faster permit timelines, fewer document legalisations and clearer rules on dependent family members. Conversely, HR teams must map which legal entities meet eligibility tests and begin forecasting demand spikes in year one of implementation.
The agreement arrives as EU supply-chain legislation spurs companies to diversify manufacturing into Mercosur. Mobility experts expect a rush of short-term project travel as due-diligence teams survey sites.
Action points: audit current EU-bound travellers, review Posted Worker Notification obligations (which remain), and budget for policy updates once final implementing guidelines are released. (visahq.com)
Once ratified by the European Parliament and Mercosur legislatures—earliest late 2026—the chapter will oblige member states to issue priority visas and residence permits within 30 days for qualifying executives. It also creates a joint committee to troubleshoot consular bottlenecks, a first for an EU trade pact with Latin America.
For companies looking for practical support as these new procedures roll out, VisaHQ’s specialists can coordinate both EU and Brazilian visa applications, track priority processing windows and pre-check documentation before submission. Their dedicated Brazil page (https://www.visahq.com/brazil/) summarises current requirements and lets corporate travel managers place consolidated orders online—keeping HR teams compliant while the agreement is phased in.
Brazilian subsidiaries of European multinationals stand to gain: faster permit timelines, fewer document legalisations and clearer rules on dependent family members. Conversely, HR teams must map which legal entities meet eligibility tests and begin forecasting demand spikes in year one of implementation.
The agreement arrives as EU supply-chain legislation spurs companies to diversify manufacturing into Mercosur. Mobility experts expect a rush of short-term project travel as due-diligence teams survey sites.
Action points: audit current EU-bound travellers, review Posted Worker Notification obligations (which remain), and budget for policy updates once final implementing guidelines are released. (visahq.com)







