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Brazil’s sweeping tax reform, the Reforma Tributária, is already altering the economics of mergers and acquisitions across every sector. For general counsel, CFOs and private-equity deal teams evaluating targets in Latin America’s largest economy, understanding the interplay between tax reform and M&A in Brazil is no longer optional; it is the single most consequential variable in deal pricing, risk allocation and post-closing integration. Constitutional Amendment 132/2023 laid the legislative foundation, replacing a patchwork of federal, state and municipal indirect taxes with a dual-VAT model built around the Imposto sobre Bens e Serviços (IBS) and the Contribuição sobre Bens e Serviços (CBS).
Parallel income-tax proposals, including a minimum withholding on certain outbound payments, add a further dimension that cross-border acquirers must model before signing. This guide distils the Brazil tax changes 2026 into an actionable playbook for buyers and sellers, covering valuation adjustments, structuring options, due-diligence red flags, drafting language and compliance calendars.
What to do this quarter:
The Reforma Tributária is the most significant restructuring of Brazil’s consumption-tax system since the 1988 Constitution. At its core, the reform replaces five overlapping indirect taxes, PIS, COFINS, IPI (federal), ICMS (state) and ISS (municipal), with two value-added levies: the CBS, collected at the federal level, and the IBS, shared between states and municipalities. Both follow a destination principle, meaning tax accrues where goods or services are consumed rather than where they originate. For M&A deal structuring in Brazil, this shift fundamentally changes how buyers model a target’s effective tax rate, credit recovery and cash-conversion cycle.
Constitutional Amendment 132, promulgated in December 2023, provided the enabling framework. Complementary Law 214/2025 then established the detailed rules for IBS and CBS, including rates, credit mechanics and the transition calendar. Separately, Bill 1,087/2025 introduced income-tax amendments, most critically, a proposed minimum effective income tax on high-income individuals and adjustments to withholding on certain cross-border payments, that industry observers expect will interact directly with M&A pricing once enacted in final form.
| Date | Change | Practical Impact for M&A |
|---|---|---|
| December 2023 | Constitutional Amendment 132 promulgated, enabling VAT redesign | Legislative basis established; transitional rules framework defined for phased replacement of legacy taxes |
| January 2025 | Complementary Law 214/2025 enacted, IBS/CBS detailed rules | Specific rates, credit mechanisms and destination-based collection rules codified; deal models must incorporate new tax base |
| 2026, transition window opens | CBS at a test rate begins collection; IBS transition commences in parallel | Buyers and sellers must model dual-regime cash-flow timing differences; targets carry obligations under both old and new systems |
| 2027–2032 | Gradual phase-out of PIS/COFINS, ICMS and ISS; IBS/CBS phase-in | Extended coexistence period creates diligence complexity; earn-outs spanning the window require explicit tax-adjustment clauses |
| 2033 onward | Full IBS/CBS regime operational; legacy indirect taxes extinguished | Stabilised environment; residual audit exposure from transition years persists for up to five years |
The extended coexistence period is a defining feature of this reform. For the next several years, targets will operate under overlapping obligations, filing returns under both the old and new regimes. Industry observers expect this dual-compliance burden to surface significant diligence findings in deals signed through the transition window.
The shift from origin-based, cascading indirect taxes to a destination-based, non-cumulative VAT directly affects every line of a target’s financial model. The tax reform and M&A in Brazil are now inseparable at the valuation stage, and deal teams that fail to recalibrate their assumptions risk material mispricing.
Under the old regime, embedded tax costs (particularly ICMS and PIS/COFINS on inputs) often reduced gross margins but were partially offset by credits that varied widely by state, sector and incentive regime. The IBS/CBS model is designed to be fully non-cumulative, every input credit should flow through. In theory, this improves cash conversion. In practice, the transition creates timing mismatches: credits accumulated under the old system may not be immediately usable against new IBS/CBS liabilities, temporarily inflating working-capital requirements.
Key modelling adjustments that deal teams should integrate immediately include:
| Variable | Pre-Reform Assumption | Post-Reform Adjustment |
|---|---|---|
| Effective indirect-tax rate (blended) | Varies by state and sector (often 25–34%) | Converges toward the unified IBS/CBS reference rate; model ±2 pp sensitivity band |
| Input-credit recovery cycle | 30–90 days (sector-dependent) | Add 60–180 days of transition lag for legacy-credit absorption |
| State fiscal incentive value | Quantified at full ICMS-reduction amount | Phase-down to zero over the transition; replace with any new IBS destination credits if available |
| Deferred-tax asset (DTA) on balance sheet | Recognised under old tax base | Reassess realisability under IBS/CBS rules; write down DTAs tied to expiring incentives |
| Earn-out baseline EBITDA | Calculated using historic tax assumptions | Insert adjustment clause pegging EBITDA to a constant-tax-rate convention or define permitted add-backs |
For purchase-price allocation (PPA), the reform matters in two ways. First, deferred-tax liabilities and assets recognised on acquired intangibles must reflect the new IBS/CBS base, not the legacy indirect-tax base. Second, targets with significant guerra fiscal benefits will see those benefits written down during transition, which compresses fair-value allocations and potentially triggers impairment at the deal-model level.
The reform reshapes the relative attractiveness of share purchases versus asset purchases, and elevates holding-company planning from a routine step to a critical decision node. Understanding how the tax reform affects M&A deal structuring in Brazil requires a side-by-side comparison of the two primary acquisition routes under the new rules.
In a share sale, the buyer acquires the equity of the Brazilian target entity. The target’s tax history, including obligations under the old indirect-tax system, transfers to the buyer by operation of law. Under the reform, this means:
In an asset deal, the buyer selectively acquires operational assets (contracts, IP, equipment, inventory) without assuming the target entity’s legal identity. Post-reform considerations include:
Cross-border acquirers routinely interpose a Brazilian holding company (holding pura or holding mista) between the foreign parent and the operating target. The reform alters the calculus in two respects:
| Structure Element | Pre-Reform Treatment | Post-Reform Treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Upstream dividends from opco to holdco | Generally exempt from income tax at the holdco level; no indirect tax | Dividend exemption under review in Bill 1,087/2025; industry observers expect at least partial taxation of dividends above a threshold |
| Intercompany service fees (holdco to opco) | Subject to ISS and PIS/COFINS; rates varied by municipality | Subject to IBS/CBS at uniform destination rate; eliminates municipal-rate arbitrage |
| Capital-gains on disposal of opco shares by holdco | Taxed at 15–22.5% depending on gain amount | Rate structure under income-tax reform proposals may change; model scenarios at both current and proposed rates |
| Transfer-pricing on holdco–opco flows | Brazil’s unique TP rules (fixed margins) | Brazil adopted OECD-aligned TP rules from January 2024; full arm’s-length standard now applies, increasing documentation burden |
The practical effect of the reform on holding-company structures is that municipal-rate arbitrage through ISS optimisation is being eliminated, while the income-tax treatment of dividends and capital gains is in flux. Deal teams should model at least two scenarios, current law and the income-tax proposals in Bill 1,087/2025, before selecting a structure. Early indications suggest that the combined effect will push more acquirers toward share deals where the target has clean compliance history, and toward asset-selective carve-outs where legacy risk is material.
Foreign acquirers face a distinct set of considerations that sit at the intersection of the consumption-tax reform and the parallel income-tax proposals. The cross-border M&A Brazil tax environment in 2026 requires careful navigation across three dimensions: withholding on outbound payments, transfer-pricing compliance and treaty-network management.
Brazil imposes withholding tax (IRRF) on a range of outbound payments, dividends, interest, royalties, service fees and capital gains realised by non-residents. Bill 1,087/2025 proposes a minimum effective income tax on certain high-income recipients and adjustments to withholding rates that industry observers expect will increase the effective outbound burden for some payment types. Practical steps for cross-border deal teams include:
Brazil adopted OECD-aligned transfer-pricing rules effective January 2024, replacing its long-standing fixed-margin system. For M&A transactions, the transfer pricing implications are significant:
Tax-driven restructurings, such as interposing a holding company in a treaty jurisdiction to reduce withholding, face heightened scrutiny. Brazil’s tax authorities have become increasingly active in challenging treaty shopping, and the reform-era guidance is expected to tighten substance requirements for interposed entities. Deal teams should ensure that any intermediate holding entity has genuine economic substance, local decision-making authority and adequate staffing to withstand a substance-over-form challenge.
The transition period introduces a uniquely complex tax due diligence environment in Brazil. Targets will carry obligations under both old and new regimes, and the risk profile of historical tax positions will shift as the Receita Federal and state authorities adjust enforcement priorities. Below is a structured checklist organised by exposure category, with a risk-severity rating to help deal teams prioritise findings.
| Diligence Item | What to Look For | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|
| ICMS credit inventory reconciliation | Accumulated ICMS credits that may not convert to IBS credits; verify state-by-state balances and any judicial disputes over creditability | High |
| ISS historical compliance (municipal) | Under-reported ISS on services; municipal audit exposure persists even after ISS is replaced by IBS | Medium |
| PIS/COFINS non-cumulative credit claims | Aggressive credit positions (e.g., on inputs that Receita Federal disputes); pending administrative or judicial proceedings | High |
| Guerra fiscal incentive documentation | Whether ICMS incentives were properly registered with CONFAZ; unregistered incentives carry reassessment risk | High |
| IBS/CBS early-filing compliance | As transition-year filings begin, verify the target is registered and filing correctly under the new system | Medium |
Deal teams should integrate these findings into a unified risk matrix and use the output to calibrate buyer protections in the transaction documents, specific indemnities, escrow sizing and disclosure-schedule requirements.
Standard M&A documentation drafted before the Reforma Tributária will almost certainly require updating. The reform introduces new drafting considerations for tax representations, indemnification mechanics and earn-out formulas. Below are the critical areas and illustrative clause language.
A well-drafted specific tax indemnity for deals closing during the transition should address both legacy and new-regime exposure. Illustrative language:
“Seller shall indemnify Buyer for any Tax Loss arising from (i) legacy PIS, COFINS, ICMS, ISS or IPI obligations relating to Pre-Closing Tax Periods and (ii) any IBS/CBS liability attributable to transactions occurring prior to the Closing Date, including penalties for non-compliance with transitional filing requirements.”
Key drafting points:
Earn-outs that span the transition period are particularly vulnerable to distortion. If EBITDA is the earn-out metric, changes in the effective indirect-tax rate will mechanically alter the result. Recommended approaches:
Closing the deal is only the beginning. The first 12 months after acquisition are critical for integrating the target into the buyer’s compliance infrastructure under the new regime.
The tax reform and M&A in Brazil are now inextricably linked. Every deal signed during the transition period, and for years afterwards, must account for the structural shift from cascading, origin-based indirect taxes to a destination-based IBS/CBS model, the phase-out of state fiscal incentives, and the still-evolving income-tax proposals that could alter dividend, withholding and capital-gains treatment. Buyers and sellers who act now to update their valuation models, restructure deal documentation and sharpen their due diligence focus will be materially better positioned than those who wait for full legislative clarity. Engage experienced Brazilian M&A and tax counsel early, model multiple scenarios, and build flexibility into every transaction document.
Browse qualified M&A practitioners on the Global Law Experts network for jurisdiction-specific guidance.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or tax advice. Readers should consult qualified counsel before acting on any of the matters discussed.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Leonardo Theon de Moraes at TM Associados, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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