
Brazil’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs confirmed on 1 March that travellers from China, Denmark, France, Hungary, Ireland, Jamaica and Saint Lucia—as well as the Bahamas—may now enter visa-free for stays of up to 30 days, extendable locally to 90 days within a 12-month period. The decree, published in the Diário Oficial da União and effective from 24 February, completes the reciprocity loop created when China began admitting Brazilian tourists visa-free in mid-2025. For Chinese corporates the change is more than symbolic. Brazil is China’s top trading partner in Latin America, with bilateral commerce surpassing US $170 billion in 2025. Mobility teams have long complained that obtaining a Brazilian business visa could take three to five weeks—an eternity when engineers are needed on a mining site or bankers must close a São Paulo deal. The waiver removes that bottleneck, enabling same-week travel provided visitors carry a passport valid for six months, proof of funds and return or onward tickets.
If your organisation still needs guidance on Brazil’s entry rules—or any other mobility issue—VisaHQ’s streamlined platform can help. Travellers can verify requirements, upload documents and launch applications through a single dashboard, with country-specific information such as the dedicated China portal at https://www.visahq.com/china/
Tourism officials expect a visible impact. Even during the pandemic-affected 2022 season, 55,000 Chinese tourists spent an average of US $1,900 each in Brazil, according to Embratur. A return to 2019 volumes (approximately 131,000 visitors) would inject an extra US $100–150 million into Brazil’s hospitality sector—and that figure could rise if airlines restore pre-Covid wide-body capacity on the Guangzhou–São Paulo route. The waiver, however, is unilateral for seven of the eight countries; only China offers Brazilian citizens the same privilege. That asymmetry underscores Brazil’s eagerness to attract high-spending, long-haul travellers in the run-up to major events such as the 2027 ICCA Congress and the 2028 World Expo bid. For mobility planners the message is simple: Brazil is open, but ensure staff respect the 30-/90-day limit and avoid any remunerated activities without the appropriate permits. Chinese companies with operations in Brazil should also revisit compliance check-lists. While entry is simpler, tax residency kicks in after 183 days in a 12-month period; payroll teams need to monitor cumulative stays to avoid unexpected income-tax liabilities.
If your organisation still needs guidance on Brazil’s entry rules—or any other mobility issue—VisaHQ’s streamlined platform can help. Travellers can verify requirements, upload documents and launch applications through a single dashboard, with country-specific information such as the dedicated China portal at https://www.visahq.com/china/
Tourism officials expect a visible impact. Even during the pandemic-affected 2022 season, 55,000 Chinese tourists spent an average of US $1,900 each in Brazil, according to Embratur. A return to 2019 volumes (approximately 131,000 visitors) would inject an extra US $100–150 million into Brazil’s hospitality sector—and that figure could rise if airlines restore pre-Covid wide-body capacity on the Guangzhou–São Paulo route. The waiver, however, is unilateral for seven of the eight countries; only China offers Brazilian citizens the same privilege. That asymmetry underscores Brazil’s eagerness to attract high-spending, long-haul travellers in the run-up to major events such as the 2027 ICCA Congress and the 2028 World Expo bid. For mobility planners the message is simple: Brazil is open, but ensure staff respect the 30-/90-day limit and avoid any remunerated activities without the appropriate permits. Chinese companies with operations in Brazil should also revisit compliance check-lists. While entry is simpler, tax residency kicks in after 183 days in a 12-month period; payroll teams need to monitor cumulative stays to avoid unexpected income-tax liabilities.