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Two concurrent legal shifts have fundamentally altered how transactions close in the Brazilian property market: the Supreme Federal Tribunal’s April 2026 decision in ADPF 342, which upheld decades‑old restrictions on foreign acquisition of rural land, and the national reforma tributária that began replacing PIS, COFINS, IPI, ICMS and ISS with the new CBS and IBS dual‑VAT system on 1 January 2026. For developers launching incorporações, foreign buyers structuring acquisitions, and lenders underwriting project finance, the compliance landscape looks markedly different from even twelve months ago. Real estate lawyers in Brazil are now advising clients to revisit every stage of a deal, from beneficial‑ownership disclosure and municipal cap checks through to invoice formatting and input‑credit modelling, before signing or closing.
The convergence of the STF ruling and the tax reform creates a new baseline for property transactions across Brazil. Between 23 and 27 April 2026, the STF concluded its judgment in ADPF 342, confirming that the restrictions contained in Law No. 5,709/1971 on foreign acquisition and leasing of rural properties remain constitutional. Separately, from 1 January 2026 the federal government’s tax‑reform transition period began, requiring all taxpayers to issue electronic fiscal documents highlighting CBS at 0.9% and IBS at 0.1%, with amounts paid on those new contributions offsetting existing PIS/COFINS and other federal obligations.
The practical effect is immediate. Foreign buyers and the Brazilian vehicles they control face renewed enforcement of acreage and municipal‑area caps. Incorporadoras must reconfigure accounting, invoicing and margin models for projects that straddle the old and new tax regimes. Lenders are tightening conditions precedent and covenant packages to address both sets of risks.
Below are the six priority action steps that real estate lawyers in Brazil are recommending to clients right now:
ADPF 342, an Arguição de Descumprimento de Preceito Fundamental, challenged the constitutionality of the regime governing foreign acquisition of rural property in Brazil. The case centred on Law No. 5,709/1971, which imposes limits on the purchase and lease (arrendamento) of rural land by foreign natural persons, foreign legal entities, and Brazilian companies in which foreigners hold a majority of the share capital or exercise decisive management control.
The STF’s majority held that the restrictions in Law No. 5,709/1971 do not violate the constitutional principles of equal treatment or free enterprise. The court reasoned that the statute serves legitimate objectives, national sovereignty, food security and orderly territorial occupation, and that the differential treatment of foreign capital in relation to rural land is proportionate to those objectives. As reported by Mayer Brown following the conclusion of the trial on 27 April 2026, the decision “upholds the restrictive regime for the acquisition of rural properties by foreign capital,” settling a question that had generated regulatory uncertainty since the Attorney General’s Office issued Opinion LA‑01/2010.
In practical terms, the judgment re‑affirms two core constraints. First, individual foreign nationals may acquire rural land only within the area limits set by the statute, generally between 3 and 50 módulos de exploração indefinida (MEIs), depending on the municipality. Second, the total area of rural land held by foreigners within any single municipality must not exceed 25% of the municipality’s total area, and no more than 10% may be held by nationals of any single country.
The ruling applies to foreign natural persons, to foreign legal entities, and, critically, to Brazilian companies that are majority‑owned or effectively controlled by foreign capital. This last category is the one that has historically generated the most deal friction. Demarest Advogados noted during the hearings that the STF’s interpretation treats control functionally: it looks beyond nominal shareholdings to management rights, veto powers and other governance mechanisms.
Several issues remain open. The decision does not create a bright‑line test for “effective control,” leaving room for future regulatory guidance or case‑by‑case analysis by land registries (cartórios de registro de imóveis) and INCRA (the federal agrarian‑reform agency). It also does not alter the rules for urban property, which continue to be governed by separate legislation and remain broadly accessible to foreign buyers. Industry observers expect that INCRA will issue updated administrative guidance implementing the decision in the coming months, potentially clarifying borderline scenarios such as joint ventures with balanced 50/50 control structures.
The ADPF 342 outcome requires real estate lawyers in Brazil to segment their advice depending on the buyer’s structure, the property classification (rural vs. urban) and the municipality involved. Below is a structured overview of the three most common scenarios.
A foreign natural person wishing to acquire rural land must hold a CPF (Cadastro de Pessoas Físicas) and must comply with the acreage limits defined in Law No. 5,709/1971 for the relevant municipality. Before closing, the notary and land registry will verify the 25% municipal cap by consulting INCRA records. If the cap has already been reached, the acquisition will be refused regardless of the property’s size. For a detailed walkthrough of the CPF/CNPJ issuance process for foreigners, readers can consult our companion guide.
Many foreign investors have historically used Brazilian special‑purpose vehicles (SPVs) to hold rural land, reasoning that a locally incorporated company should not be subject to the restrictions of Law No. 5,709/1971. The ADPF 342 decision dispels this assumption where the SPV is foreign‑controlled. Brazilian companies whose share capital is majority‑held by foreign persons or entities, or in which foreigners exercise decisive management control, are now unambiguously subject to the same acreage and municipal‑cap restrictions as foreign individuals. Counsel should review shareholder agreements, articles of association and any side letters that could evidence foreign control.
Law No. 5,709/1971 extends its restrictions to leases (arrendamentos) of rural land, and the STF affirmed this scope. A foreign buyer that cannot acquire title may not circumvent the regime through a long‑term lease. Lease agreements exceeding three years or covering areas above the statutory threshold require prior authorisation from INCRA and, in border zones, the National Defence Council (CDN).
Land registries are obligated to report all rural‑property acquisitions by foreign persons or foreign‑controlled entities to INCRA on a quarterly basis. The rural environmental registry (CAR, Cadastro Ambiental Rural) must also be current. Failure to disclose foreign‑ownership status can result in nullification of the registration and administrative penalties. For foreign buyers Brazil 2026 now requires enhanced diligence at the registry level, and counsel should anticipate longer registration timelines as cartórios adjust to the reinforced regime.
| Entity Type | Acquisition Permitted? | Practical Conditions / Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Foreign natural person | Limited, subject to STF holding and municipal caps | Must hold CPF; verify Law No. 5,709/1971 acreage limits and 25% municipal cap via INCRA records |
| Brazilian company wholly owned by foreigners | Restricted, treated as “foreign‑controlled” under ADPF 342 | Full disclosure of foreign control required; risk of denial if municipal cap exceeded; review governance docs for control indicators |
| Brazilian company with minority foreign investors | Generally permitted (subject to control thresholds) | Document beneficial ownership and control rights; ensure shareholder agreements do not grant foreigners decisive management powers; lender covenants should require ongoing compliance |
Constitutional Amendment 132 enacted the most significant overhaul of Brazil’s consumption‑tax system in decades. The reform replaces five levies, PIS, COFINS and IPI at the federal level, ICMS at the state level, and ISS at the municipal level, with a dual‑VAT structure comprising CBS (Contribuição sobre Bens e Serviços, federal) and IBS (Imposto sobre Bens e Serviços, sub‑national). According to the Receita Federal’s official 2026 orientation guidance, from 1 January 2026 all taxpayers must issue electronic fiscal documents highlighting CBS at 0.9% and IBS at 0.1%. Amounts collected under both new contributions may be used to offset PIS/COFINS and other federal tax obligations during the calibration period.
The standard combined CBS+IBS rate is estimated at up to 26.5% once the transition is complete, though the effective rate will vary by sector and regime. For the reforma tributária 2026 incorporations sector, the impact is particularly nuanced because real‑estate development involves long project cycles, parcelled sales over multiple years, and a mix of land (often non‑taxable) and construction services (fully taxable).
The year 2026 serves as a calibration and testing period. PIS and COFINS continue to apply at their current rates alongside the new CBS and IBS. The dual‑charge system means incorporadoras must maintain parallel accounting tracks, one for legacy obligations and one for the new contributions. By 2027, PIS and COFINS are scheduled for full extinction and replacement by CBS. The complete phase‑out of ICMS and ISS in favour of IBS is set to run through 2033.
For projects already under way, the key modelling question is how input credits will be treated during the transition. Under the current regime, many incorporadoras operate under the regime cumulativo for PIS/COFINS, which does not permit input‑credit deductions. The new IVA Dual system is non‑cumulative by design, meaning that CBS and IBS paid on construction inputs, cement, steel, labour services, should in principle be creditable against output tax on unit sales. Industry observers expect this shift to benefit developers with high input costs, although the net effect will depend on whether the reduced‑rate provisions applicable to the real‑estate sector (currently under discussion) align with the standard 26. 5% rate or receive a sector‑specific discount.
For a deeper analysis of how the reforma tributária affects incorporações, see our dedicated article.
The reform does not eliminate ITBI (Imposto sobre Transmissão de Bens Imóveis), which remains a municipal‑level transfer tax. However, the interaction between ITBI and the new IBS (which subsumes ISS and ICMS but not ITBI) requires careful structuring. In incorporação transactions where the developer transfers units to buyers, the taxable event for ITBI is typically the registration of the deed at the land registry. Counsel must ensure that ITBI calculations are not inadvertently inflated by the new VAT base, particularly where sale prices include construction‑service components that were previously subject to ISS rather than ITBI. Early indications suggest municipalities may seek to expand ITBI assessment bases to compensate for ISS phase‑out revenue losses.
Given the simultaneous impact of ADPF 342 and the tax reform, deal documentation for Brazilian property transactions in 2026 requires more granular drafting than in prior years. Below is a framework that experienced real estate lawyers in Brazil are applying to new transactions.
Purchase and sale agreements should now include several provisions that were previously optional or uncommon:
For SPV formation, articles of association should explicitly allocate management powers in a way that does not inadvertently trigger the “foreign‑control” test. Voting‑rights agreements, board‑composition clauses and veto catalogues need review by counsel familiar with the functional‑control standard affirmed in ADPF 342.
Lenders, whether commercial banks, Caixas Econômicas or capital‑market investors acquiring CRIs (Certificados de Recebíveis Imobiliários), are recalibrating their diligence packages in response to the 2026 changes. Housing credit rules 2026 require enhanced know‑your‑customer procedures focused on beneficial ownership, particularly for transactions involving rural or mixed‑use properties where the ADPF 342 regime applies.
Conditions precedent for project‑finance facilities now typically include confirmation that no entity in the borrower group is “foreign‑controlled” for purposes of the rural‑land restrictions, or, if it is, that all statutory authorisations (INCRA, CDN) have been obtained. Loan covenants may require periodic re‑certification of this status and grant the lender step‑in or acceleration rights if the borrower breaches.
For CRI issuances backed by receivables from incorporações, underwriters must assess whether the underlying real‑estate assets comply with the reinforced foreign‑ownership regime and whether the cash flows are modelled under the correct tax assumptions. A CRI prospectus drafted today must disclose the CBS/IBS transition risk as a material factor. Collateral perfection, registration of alienação fiduciária (fiduciary assignment) at the land registry, also faces longer processing times as cartórios adapt to new electronic‑document requirements mandated by the Receita Federal from 1 January 2026.
The following checklist consolidates the principal compliance actions that developers, foreign buyers and lenders should complete before closing:
| Scenario | Rural Property? | Foreign Buyer/Control? | ADPF 342 Applies? | CBS/IBS Impact? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brazilian individual buying urban apartment | No | No | No | Yes, transition invoicing |
| Foreign individual buying urban apartment | No | Yes | No | Yes, transition invoicing |
| Foreign individual buying rural fazenda | Yes | Yes | Yes, full restrictions | Yes, transition invoicing |
| Brazilian SPV (foreign‑controlled) buying rural land | Yes | Yes (control) | Yes, full restrictions | Yes, transition invoicing |
| Brazilian SPV (minority foreign) buying rural land | Yes | No (minority, no control) | Monitor, document control rights | Yes, transition invoicing |
The following timeline organises the key pre‑closing actions by urgency and assigns responsibility:
| Timeframe | Action | Responsible Party |
|---|---|---|
| Immediately (0–30 days) | Engage real estate counsel to assess ADPF 342 applicability and tax‑reform exposure | Buyer / Developer |
| 0–30 days | Complete beneficial‑ownership mapping and foreign‑control analysis | Counsel |
| 30–60 days | Obtain INCRA municipal‑cap certificate and CAR confirmation | Counsel / Notary |
| 30–60 days | Update ERP/invoicing systems for CBS/IBS electronic fiscal document requirements | Developer / CFO |
| 60–90 days | Finalise deal documentation with foreign‑control representations, tax gross‑ups and compliance covenants | Counsel (both sides) |
| 60–90 days | Deliver conditions precedent to lender (legal opinions, compliance certificates, insurance) | Borrower / Counsel |
| 90–180 days | Complete registration at land registry; file INCRA quarterly reports if applicable | Notary / Counsel |
| 90–180 days | Model CBS/IBS input credits and recalculate project margins for incorporação cash‑flow projections | Developer / Tax adviser |
| Ongoing | Monitor INCRA administrative guidance and IBS National Committee regulations | Counsel |
The 2026 legal environment for Brazilian real‑estate transactions demands a level of integrated analysis, combining property law, corporate structuring, foreign‑investment restrictions and transitional tax compliance, that was not required even two years ago. Whether the transaction involves a foreign buyer acquiring a São Paulo apartment, a multinational structuring an agribusiness land holding through a local SPV, or an incorporadora recalculating margins under the new CBS/IBS regime, the stakes of getting compliance wrong have risen sharply. Real estate lawyers in Brazil are the critical link between these overlapping regulatory regimes and a successful closing. Early engagement with qualified counsel is not just advisable, it is, for many deal types, a practical necessity.
Last reviewed: 10 May 2026. This article provides general legal information and does not constitute legal advice. The applicability of the rules discussed depends on the specific facts of each transaction. Readers should consult qualified counsel before acting on any information contained herein.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact BOTTI/Mendes Advogados at BOTTI/Mendes Advogados, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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