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Jan 24, 2026

Brazil Weighs 67 % Hike in Passport Fee, Raising Cost of Global Mobility

Brazil Weighs 67 % Hike in Passport Fee, Raising Cost of Global Mobility
Brazilian travelers may soon pay R$ 430 (about US$ 86) for a standard passport, up from R$ 257, after the Federal Police formally asked the Ministry of Justice to approve a 67 % increase. The request, confirmed on 23 January, cites inflationary erosion since the last adjustment in 2015 and a spike in biometric-chip manufacturing costs.

If endorsed, the new tariff would place Brazil among Latin America’s most expensive passport issuers, just as outbound travel rebounds to pre-pandemic levels. In 2024, the country issued a record 2.1 million passports; demand is projected to grow a further 12 % this year due to resumed U.S. and European flight capacity and the surge in remote-work travel.

Corporate-mobility managers warn that higher document costs could become a hidden expense in expatriate packages and business-travel budgets. A family of four renewing passports would face an additional R$ 690 outlay—costs that employers often reimburse. The hospitality sector also fears that leisure travelers on tight budgets could postpone plans that require multiple visas, dampening outbound tourism to destinations such as Japan, which recently reinstated in-person visa appointments for Brazilians.

Brazil Weighs 67 % Hike in Passport Fee, Raising Cost of Global Mobility


Whether or not passport fees rise, travelers can simplify the next step—securing visas—through VisaHQ. The platform (https://www.visahq.com/brazil/) lets Brazilian citizens and corporate travel teams check entry rules for hundreds of countries, upload documents for review, and arrange courier submission, shaving days off the application process and helping offset higher passport costs.

The Ministry of Justice has opened a 15-day public-consultation window. Travel-industry associations are lobbying for a phased approach or fee waivers for low-income applicants, pointing to surplus revenues in the Federal Police’s migration fund. Critics argue that steep hikes without service-level guarantees—average issuance still takes 7–10 working days in major cities—could fuel black-market document brokers.

For now, applicants can still pay the old fee, but advisers urge travelers with urgent international plans to submit requests promptly. The government has not ruled out parallel increases to express-service and lost-passport penalties, which would rise proportionally if the proposal is approved.
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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