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Brazil 2026: What Contract Lawyers and Deal Teams Must Know About the Tax Reform and 2026 Regulatory Changes

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Last reviewed: May 15, 2026

The landscape for commercial contracts Brazil has shifted decisively in 2026. Lei Complementar No. 227/2026, published on January 13, 2026, established the framework for Brazil’s new consumption tax system, the Imposto sobre Bens e Serviços (IBS) and the Contribuição sobre Bens e Serviços (CBS), setting off a phased transition that will run through 2033. Alongside the tax reform, a wave of 2026 regulatory changes Brazil cannot ignore, from updated ANPD guidance on data protection to ANS contract rules affecting healthcare deals and evolving anti-corruption leniency standards, is forcing general counsel, M&A advisors and contracting teams to revisit fundamental allocation, pricing and compliance provisions.

This guide provides the practical drafting playbook, sample clauses and negotiation checklists that deal teams need to close safely in this environment.

Key takeaways for immediate action:

  • Tax indemnity overhaul required. Every M&A transaction must now address the IBS/CBS transitional exposure, including who bears liability for taxes arising during the coexistence period.
  • Commercial pricing is no longer stable. Fixed-price supplier and services agreements need reopener mechanisms tied to published IBS rate changes and evolving credit recovery rules.
  • Compliance reps are broader. LGPD M&A due diligence, anti-corruption disclosure schedules and ANS-specific warranties now demand dedicated drafting, generic boilerplate is insufficient.
  • Act now. Contracts with multi-year terms should be renegotiated within 30–90 days to capture transitional pricing and allocation changes before the next implementation windows.

Background: Lei Complementar No.227/2026 and the 2026 Regulatory Wave

Lei Complementar No. 227/2026 is the legislative cornerstone of Brazil’s long-anticipated consumption tax reform. Published on January 13, 2026, the law, available in full on the Planalto official legislation portal, establishes the Comitê Gestor do IBS (CG-IBS), the administrative body responsible for governing the new tax, and sets out the legal framework for the IBS at the subnational level and the CBS at the federal level. Together, these two non-cumulative, destination-based value-added taxes will progressively replace the existing patchwork of ICMS, ISS, PIS and COFINS over a phased transition period running from 2026 to 2033.

As PwC Brasil noted in its Tax Intelligence analysis, the reform represents the most significant structural change to indirect taxation in Brazil’s history, demanding immediate attention from every business with contractual exposure to the Brazilian market.

The tax reform is only part of the story. Several other regulatory developments in 2026 converge to create a uniquely complex contracting environment for Lei Complementar 227 contracts and broader deal activity:

Date Instrument / Actor Practical Effect for Contracts
13 January 2026 Lei Complementar No.227/2026 published (Planalto) Establishes CG-IBS and the new IBS/CBS framework; initiates the phased transition, review invoicing and pricing clauses immediately.
February–March 2026 CG-IBS technical guidance panels and regulatory implementation notes Local rules for credits and apportionment begin to crystallise, revisit input tax recovery language in all supply contracts.
2026–2033 (phased) Transition windows for replacing ICMS/ISS/PIS/COFINS with IBS/CBS Multi-year contracts need reopener clauses; allocate transitional tax risk with clear carve-outs and survival periods.
2026 (ongoing) ANPD updated guidance on LGPD compliance and enforcement M&A due diligence and data-protection reps must be expanded; remediation escrows advisable for identified gaps.
2026 (ongoing) ANS consultations on supplementary health plan regulation Healthcare sector contracts require ANS-specific warranties and compliance provisions.
2026 (ongoing) CGU/MPF anti-corruption leniency updates Seller disclosure schedules and cooperation covenants must track evolving enforcement guidance.

Understanding this regulatory timeline is essential for any team drafting or renegotiating commercial contracts Brazil-side. The sections below translate each element into actionable clause-level guidance.

What Changed for Indirect and Consumption Taxes: IBS, CBS and the Impact on Commercial Contracts Brazil

The IBS and CBS replace Brazil’s five existing indirect taxes with a dual value-added tax model. As detailed by the International Tax Review, the IBS is a subnational tax administered by the CG-IBS, while the CBS is federal, administered by the Receita Federal. Both are non-cumulative and destination-based, meaning the tax is charged where the good or service is consumed, not where it is produced. During the coexistence period, businesses will face simultaneous obligations under the legacy regime (ICMS, ISS, PIS, COFINS) and the new IBS/CBS framework, creating significant pricing, invoicing and credit recovery uncertainty for Brazil tax reform contract clauses.

The practical effects are far-reaching. Input credit mechanics will differ from the current regime, potentially altering the effective cost of goods and services. Transitional credits for legacy taxes will be available, but the precise apportionment and recovery rules are still being finalised through CG-IBS technical guidance. Invoicing will require compliance with both legacy and new formats during the transition. For contracting parties, this means that pricing assumptions embedded in existing agreements may no longer hold.

Contract-Level Consequences: Pricing, Invoicing and Pass-Throughs

Every supplier agreement, services contract and procurement arrangement with a Brazilian counterparty must now address the following:

  • Tax incidence statements. Contracts should specify which taxes are included in the contract price and how new IBS/CBS obligations will be allocated between the parties.
  • Price reopener mechanisms. Fixed-price agreements should include a tax change trigger allowing renegotiation if the IBS/CBS rate materially differs from the rates assumed at execution.
  • Credit pass-through. Where the supplier recovers input credits, contracts should define whether savings are shared with the buyer and how transitional credits are accounted for.
  • Invoicing compliance. Obligations to issue compliant invoices under both legacy and new regimes should be expressly allocated, with indemnity for non-compliance.

Sample tax pass-through clause (adapt to deal specifics): “If, during the term of this Agreement, any change in applicable tax law, including the introduction, modification, or phase-in of the IBS or CBS, results in an increase or decrease in the effective tax burden on the supply of goods or services hereunder exceeding [●]% of the contract price, either Party may request a price adjustment by written notice. The Parties shall negotiate in good faith within [30] days of such notice.”

Corporate Income Tax and Transactional Tax Traps Affecting M&A

While LC227 is primarily a consumption tax reform, deal teams must not overlook the knock-on effects on corporate income tax and transactional taxes. The reform’s restructuring of indirect taxes can alter the tax basis for deductible expenses, change the treatment of intercompany pricing and affect net operating loss (NOL) utilisation in post-closing periods. The Receita Federal continues to issue interpretive guidance on how the transition affects income tax computations, and early indications suggest that disputes may arise around the deductibility of transitional tax costs.

ITCMD and ITBI Drafting Alerts for Asset Deals vs Share Deals

LC227 also introduced adjustments to the framework around the ITCMD (Imposto sobre Transmissão Causa Mortis e Doação) and ITBI (Imposto sobre Transmissão de Bens Imóveis), the transfer taxes applicable to succession, donations and real-estate transactions. For M&A practitioners, the key drafting alert is that the reform may alter the connection criteria for ITCMD in interstate transactions and affect the calculation basis for ITBI in asset deals. Contract drafting strategies to minimise exposure include:

  • Share deal structuring. Where commercially feasible, structuring as a share acquisition rather than an asset acquisition may reduce ITBI exposure, though sellers should note potential ITCMD implications on downstream restructuring.
  • Basis verification. Include a contractual obligation on the seller to provide verified tax assessment bases for all real property and to indemnify the buyer for any upward adjustment in assessed value post-closing.
  • Tax opinion requirements. For material transactions, require delivery of an independent tax opinion on ITCMD/ITBI exposure as a condition precedent to closing.

M&A Tax Indemnities Brazil: Allocating Tax Risk and Drafting the Playbook

The central question in every 2026 M&A transaction involving a Brazilian target is: who bears liability for taxes arising from the transition? The answer requires careful negotiation of M&A tax indemnities Brazil practitioners are now redesigning. As noted in Demarest’s firm alert on LC227, the coexistence period introduces a category of tax liabilities that do not fit neatly into traditional pre-closing/post-closing allocation models, transitional taxes may straddle the closing date or arise from legacy positions that only crystallise under the new regime.

Standard Allocation Models: Advantages and Disadvantages

Model Advantages Disadvantages
Seller indemnity (pre-closing liabilities) Clean allocation; buyer protected from legacy exposure; market standard Relies on seller creditworthiness; may not capture transitional taxes that crystallise post-closing
Buyer tax retention (holdback) Buyer retains funds to cover identified risks; simple mechanics Seller receives less at closing; disputes over release timing; may not cover unidentified risks
Tax escrow Independent third-party holds funds; structured release triggers; covers identified and contingent risks Cost of escrow agent; negotiation of triggers and dispute resolution; ties up capital
Tax covenant period Flexible; seller manages tax affairs for a defined post-closing period; buyer has audit rights Operational complexity; seller may resist continued involvement; dispute-prone

Industry observers expect the tax escrow model to become increasingly prevalent for Brazilian M&A transactions closing during the 2026–2033 transition, given the uncertainty around IBS/CBS credit recovery and the potential for retroactive assessment of transitional positions.

Sample Indemnity Clause: Seller Indemnity for Pre-Closing Tax Liabilities

Sample wording, adapt to deal specifics: “The Seller shall indemnify, defend and hold harmless the Buyer and the Target Company against any Losses arising from (a) Tax liabilities attributable to Pre-Closing Tax Periods, including any liability arising under the ICMS, ISS, PIS, COFINS, IBS or CBS regimes to the extent relating to taxable events occurring prior to the Closing Date; (b) any Transitional Tax Liability, defined as a tax liability arising from the application of IBS/CBS rules to transactions or positions initiated prior to Closing but assessed or crystallised after Closing; and (c) any penalties or interest arising from the Target Company’s failure to comply with tax obligations in Pre-Closing Tax Periods.

This indemnity shall survive for [●] years following the Closing Date, subject to an aggregate cap of [●]% of the Purchase Price.

Escrow Mechanics and Claims Process

Effective escrow arrangements for allocating tax risk Brazil deal teams face in 2026 should include the following elements:

  • Escrow amount. Typically 5–15% of the purchase price, calibrated to the identified tax exposure from due diligence findings. For LC227 transitional risks, the likely practical effect will be that escrow percentages trend toward the higher end of the range.
  • Release triggers. Tie escrow release to the expiry of the statute of limitations for the relevant tax period, resolution of pending administrative proceedings, or receipt of a clean tax clearance certificate.
  • Notification and defence. Require prompt written notice of any tax assessment or claim; grant the seller the right (but not obligation) to participate in the defence of pre-closing tax assessments, subject to buyer approval of settlement terms.
  • Dispute resolution. Appoint an independent tax expert to resolve disputes over whether a claim falls within the escrow’s scope, with costs shared equally.

Contract Renegotiation Brazil: Non-M&A Commercial Contracts Drafting Checklist

Beyond M&A, the 2026 reforms compel a thorough review of every standing commercial agreement with Brazilian counterparties. Contract renegotiation Brazil teams must prioritise the following categories.

Supplier Agreements: Pass-Throughs, Price Reopeners and Invoicing

Supplier contracts with fixed pricing are the most immediately exposed. The introduction of IBS/CBS will change the effective tax burden on supplied goods, and suppliers will seek to pass through any increase. Buyers should negotiate symmetrical pass-through provisions, covering both increases and decreases, and require documentary evidence of the actual tax change before any price adjustment takes effect. Invoicing obligations should be clearly allocated, with the supplier bearing responsibility for issuing compliant invoices under both legacy and new regimes.

Services and SaaS Contracts: IBS Treatment, Withholding and Reverse Charge

Service contracts, including SaaS agreements, face particular complexity. The IBS is a destination-based tax, meaning the tax is due where the service is consumed. For cross-border services, this may trigger reverse-charge mechanisms that were not contemplated in existing contracts. Withholding obligations may also shift. Contracting teams should add explicit provisions defining which party is responsible for withholding, remitting and reporting IBS/CBS on service fees, and include indemnity for failure to comply.

Procurement and Long-Term Supply: Change-of-Law Triggers

Long-term procurement agreements, common in energy, infrastructure and manufacturing, require change-of-law triggers that capture the tax reform. A well-drafted provision should define “change of law” to include the introduction, amendment or phase-in of any IBS, CBS or successor consumption tax, and grant either party the right to request renegotiation within a specified period. Failure to agree should lead to a defined fallback mechanism, such as independent expert determination or contractual termination with compensation.

Model renegotiation notice (adapt to deal specifics): “Pursuant to Clause [●], [Party] hereby notifies [Counterparty] that the introduction of the IBS/CBS under Lei Complementar No.227/2026 constitutes a Change of Law as defined herein. [Party] requests that the Parties commence good-faith renegotiation of the pricing and tax allocation provisions within [30] calendar days of this notice.”

Compliance Reps, LGPD and Anti-Corruption: Reps, Warranties and Remedies for 2026 Risk

The 2026 regulatory changes Brazil is experiencing extend well beyond tax. Two areas demand expanded representations and warranties in both M&A and significant commercial agreements: data protection under the LGPD and anti-corruption compliance.

LGPD Reps and Data Remediation Escrows

LGPD M&A due diligence has become a non-negotiable element of deal execution. The ANPD’s updated guidance, available on the official ANPD portal, emphasises the accountability principle and requires controllers to demonstrate comprehensive compliance programmes. For M&A, this translates into specific reps covering: lawful basis for all personal data processing, existence of data maps and records of processing activities, consent management procedures, vendor data-processing agreements, and incident response protocols. Where due diligence identifies gaps, a data remediation escrow, funded from the purchase price and released upon completion of agreed remediation milestones, provides an effective mechanism to protect the buyer while allowing the seller to cure identified deficiencies post-closing.

Anti-Corruption Reps, Disclosure Schedules and Cooperation Covenants

Brazil’s anti-corruption enforcement environment continues to evolve, with the CGU and MPF refining leniency programme standards and cooperation expectations. Sellers should provide detailed disclosure schedules covering all government contracts, pending or threatened investigations, leniency agreements and compliance programme details. Buyers should insist on cooperation covenants requiring the seller to assist with post-closing investigations and to make key personnel available for interviews. Survival periods for anti-corruption indemnities should extend to match the applicable statute of limitations.

Leniency and Regulator Changes: Impact on Seller Disclosure

Evolving leniency programme standards mean that what constituted adequate disclosure last year may not suffice in 2026. Industry observers expect regulators to demand more granular disclosure of compliance programme effectiveness, not merely programme existence. Sellers should be prepared to warrant the adequacy and effectiveness of their compliance programmes, not just their existence, and buyers should include specific indemnities for losses arising from pre-closing compliance failures that were not adequately disclosed.

Due Diligence Checklist and Practical Red Flags

A structured due diligence process is the foundation for effective risk allocation. The following checklist addresses the primary areas of concern for commercial contracts Brazil deal teams in 2026.

Area Documents to Request Red Flag Recommended Contractual Remedy
Tax (IBS/CBS transition) Tax returns (ICMS, ISS, PIS, COFINS); IBS/CBS registration status; transitional credit calculations; pending assessments Unfiled returns; disputed credits; pending administrative proceedings; no transitional planning Seller tax indemnity with escrow; tax covenant period; closing condition requiring tax clearance
Tax (ITCMD/ITBI) Property valuations; transfer tax assessments; prior restructuring documentation Undervalued assessments; pending revaluation; inter-state transfers without ITCMD analysis Basis verification warranty; independent tax opinion as CP; ITBI indemnity
LGPD / Data Protection Data maps; records of processing activities; consent records; vendor DPAs; incident logs; ANPD correspondence Missing data maps; no vendor DPAs; unreported incidents; ANPD investigations LGPD-specific reps; data remediation escrow; post-closing cooperation covenant
Anti-Corruption Compliance programme documentation; government contracts; leniency agreements; internal investigation reports; CGU/MPF correspondence Pending investigations; undisclosed government contracts; inadequate compliance programme Anti-corruption reps with extended survival; disclosure schedules; cooperation covenants
ANS (Healthcare sector) ANS registrations; pending consultations; provider network contracts; compliance reports Unregistered plans; non-compliance with ANS contract rules; pending regulatory actions ANS-specific warranties; regulatory compliance indemnity; regulatory approval as CP
NOL / Tax attributes NOL carry-forward schedules; offset history; Receita Federal interpretive rulings Aggressive offset positions; disputed NOL amounts; change-of-control limitations NOL warranty; purchase price adjustment for disallowed offsets

Negotiation Playbook and Timelines: Practical Steps to Close Safely

Successfully closing a Brazilian transaction or renegotiating a commercial contract in 2026 requires disciplined negotiation sequencing. The following framework reflects the priorities that deal teams should apply when seeking to allocate tax risk Brazil transactions now present:

  • Priority 1, Tax allocation (LOI stage). Address the IBS/CBS transitional allocation in the letter of intent or term sheet. Early agreement on whether escrow, holdback or seller indemnity will be the primary mechanism avoids delays later.
  • Priority 2, DD scope expansion (first 30 days). Expand the due diligence request list to cover IBS/CBS transitional positions, LGPD compliance and anti-corruption disclosure. Request transitional credit calculations and ANPD correspondence early.
  • Priority 3, Drafting (days 30–60). Produce first drafts of tax indemnities, escrow agreements and compliance reps incorporating LC227 provisions. Circulate sample clauses (see Appendix) as negotiation anchors.
  • Priority 4, Regulatory approvals and conditions precedent (days 60–90). For healthcare deals, confirm ANS approval timelines. For all deals, build in conditions precedent tied to tax clearance and regulatory filing confirmations.
  • Priority 5, Closing and post-closing (day 90+). Execute escrow agreements, deliver disclosure schedules, and establish post-closing cooperation mechanisms for tax defence and data remediation.

For non-M&A contract renegotiation Brazil teams, the timeline is simpler but no less urgent: issue renegotiation notices within 30 days, complete negotiation within 60 days, and execute amended agreements before the next IBS/CBS implementation window.

Conclusion: Recommended Immediate Actions for Commercial Contracts Brazil

The 2026 regulatory environment demands immediate, structured action from every organisation with contractual exposure to Brazil. Three steps should be taken now:

  1. Audit your clause inventory. Review all active contracts, M&A agreements, supplier contracts, service agreements and procurement arrangements, and identify provisions that reference ICMS, ISS, PIS, COFINS or fixed pricing without tax reopener mechanisms. Prioritise those with multi-year terms or material value.
  2. Open indemnity and allocation negotiations. For pending or planned M&A transactions, place tax allocation and escrow mechanics on the agenda at the LOI stage. For commercial contracts, issue change-of-law renegotiation notices promptly.
  3. Update your due diligence checklist. Expand DD protocols to capture IBS/CBS transitional positions, LGPD compliance gaps, anti-corruption disclosure adequacy and ANS-specific regulatory requirements. Use the checklist above as a starting framework.

Practitioners seeking specialist guidance on commercial contracts Brazil, including bespoke tax indemnity drafting, escrow structuring and LGPD remediation mechanisms, can connect with experienced counsel through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.

Appendix: Model Clauses

The following sample clauses are provided for illustrative purposes only. They should be adapted to the specific transaction, reviewed by qualified legal counsel, and tailored to the applicable regulatory and commercial context.

Clause 1, Seller Tax Indemnity (M&A)

“The Seller shall indemnify, defend and hold harmless the Buyer Indemnified Parties against any and all Losses arising from or relating to: (a) any Tax liability attributable to Pre-Closing Tax Periods, including any liability arising under the ICMS, ISS, PIS, COFINS, IBS, CBS or any successor consumption tax regime, to the extent relating to taxable events occurring prior to the Closing Date; (b) any Transitional Tax Liability, being a Tax liability arising from the application of IBS or CBS rules to transactions, positions or credits initiated or accrued prior to Closing but assessed, crystallised or demanded after the Closing Date; and (c) any fines, penalties or interest resulting from the Target’s non-compliance with Tax obligations in respect of Pre-Closing Tax Periods.

This indemnity shall survive for a period of [●] years following the Closing Date, subject to an aggregate cap of [●]% of the Enterprise Value.

Clause 2, Price Reopener for Tax Change (Supply/Service Contracts)

“If, at any time during the Term, the introduction, amendment or phase-in of the IBS, CBS or any successor consumption tax results in a change in the effective Tax burden applicable to the Goods or Services supplied hereunder that exceeds [●]% of the unit price, either Party may, by written notice, request an adjustment to the Contract Price to reflect such change. The Parties shall negotiate in good faith within [30] calendar days of receipt of such notice. Any adjustment shall be effective from the date on which the relevant Tax change took legal effect. If the Parties fail to agree within [60] calendar days, the matter shall be referred to [independent expert determination / arbitration].”

Clause 3, LGPD Representation and Remediation Mechanism (M&A)

“The Seller represents and warrants that the Target Company: (i) maintains complete and current Records of Processing Activities as required by the LGPD; (ii) has obtained and documented a lawful basis for all personal data processing activities; (iii) has entered into compliant data-processing agreements with all third-party processors; and (iv) has not suffered any personal data incident that was required to be, but was not, reported to the ANPD. To the extent that the Due Diligence Report identifies any LGPD Remediation Items, an amount equal to [●]% of the Purchase Price shall be deposited in the Remediation Escrow Account and released to the Seller upon written confirmation by the Buyer that each Remediation Item has been satisfactorily resolved.”

Clause 4, Escrow Trigger and Release (Tax Escrow)

“An amount equal to [●]% of the Purchase Price (the ‘Tax Escrow Amount’) shall be deposited with the Escrow Agent on the Closing Date.

The Tax Escrow Amount, or any remaining balance thereof, shall be released as follows: (a) [●]% of the Tax Escrow Amount shall be released to the Seller on the date that is [●] months after the Closing Date, provided no Tax Claim Notice has been delivered; (b) the remaining balance shall be released on the earlier of (i) the expiry of the applicable statute of limitations for all Pre-Closing Tax Periods and Transitional Tax Periods, and (ii) the date on which all pending Tax Claims have been finally resolved by administrative or judicial decision from which no further appeal lies. Any disputed amount shall remain in escrow pending determination by the Independent Tax Expert.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Elias Jabbour at KLA Advogados, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Planalto, Lei Complementar No.227/2026 (official text)
  2. PwC Brasil, Tax Intelligence (LC227 explainer)
  3. Demarest, firm alert on LC227
  4. Rolim, complementary law regulation analysis
  5. International Tax Review, IBS explanation
  6. ANPD, National Data Protection Authority guidance on LGPD
  7. ANS, National Supplementary Health Agency consultations and notices
  8. Receita Federal, tax administration guidance

FAQs

How does Lei Complementar No.227/2026 change contract tax allocation?
LC227 establishes the IBS/CBS framework, introducing new non-cumulative consumption taxes that will progressively replace ICMS, ISS, PIS and COFINS from 2026 through 2033. Parties to commercial contracts must revisit pricing, invoicing and indemnity language to allocate transitional tax exposure, define which taxes are included in the contract price and build in reopener mechanisms for rate changes.
Common market practice is for the seller to indemnify against pre-closing tax liabilities and the buyer to assume responsibility for post-closing taxes. For LC227 transitional taxes, which may straddle the closing date, the parties should negotiate clear carve-outs, define “Transitional Tax Liability” precisely, set appropriate survival periods and consider a dedicated tax escrow. Sample clause language is provided in the Appendix below.
Priority clauses for revision include: price-adjustment and tax gross-up provisions, tax indemnities, representations and warranties (covering tax, LGPD and anti-corruption), change-of-law and renegotiation triggers, invoicing obligations, withholding provisions and escrow release triggers. Any clause that references specific legacy taxes (ICMS, ISS, PIS, COFINS) by name should be updated to capture the IBS/CBS framework.
Buyers should insist on specific LGPD representations covering lawful processing bases, data maps, vendor data-processing agreements and incident history. Where due diligence identifies compliance gaps, a data remediation escrow, funded from the purchase price and released upon completion of remediation milestones, provides effective protection. Post-closing cooperation covenants should require the seller to assist with ANPD inquiries and data subject requests.
A tiered escrow structure is recommended: a defined escrow amount (typically 5–15% of purchase price), release triggers tied to statute-of-limitations expiry and resolution of pending administrative proceedings, an independent tax expert to resolve scope disputes, and a structured notification and defence process giving the seller participation rights in pre-closing tax assessments.
The non-cumulative, destination-based IBS/CBS model may alter input credit recovery dynamics and change the effective tax burden on supplied goods. Long-term contracts should include a price reopener tied to published IBS rate changes, define credit pass-through mechanics and require documentary evidence of actual tax changes before any adjustment takes effect.
Immediately, particularly for contracts with fixed pricing or performance periods extending beyond 2027. Issue formal renegotiation notices within 30 days and aim to conclude amended terms within 60 days to align with the next IBS/CBS implementation milestones.

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Brazil 2026: What Contract Lawyers and Deal Teams Must Know About the Tax Reform and 2026 Regulatory Changes

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