Home Brazil — Residency by Childbirth (Jus Soli)
🇧🇷 Brazil · Jus Soli Pathway

Your baby is born Brazilian. You get permanent residency — and a passport for the family in a few years.

Brazil is one of the few large countries in the world to give unconditional citizenship to every baby born on its soil. Parents get immediate permanent residency. After just one year of residency, you can naturalize. It is, on the numbers, the cheapest legal way for a family to build a second passport.

At birth
Child is Brazilian by Article 12
Immediate
Permanent residency for parents
1 year
Fast-track to citizenship
173
Visa-free destinations on Brazil passport

Not sure Brazil birthright is right for you?

Talk to Sofia — our 24/7 AI Global Mobility Advisor. She’ll ask about your passport, budget, and goal, and recommend the best-fit program in 5 minutes.

Call Sofia · +1 (762) 214-2510
Why Brazil for birthright

Three features almost no other country combines.

There are maybe five countries on earth where birthright citizenship, low cost, and a respectable passport all line up. Brazil is the one worth studying first.

Unconditional jus soli

Article 12 of the 1988 Federal Constitution: anyone born in Brazil is Brazilian — regardless of parents’ nationality, visa status, or how long they’ve been in the country. The only exception is children of foreign diplomats in service.

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Immediate permanent residency

Parents of a Brazilian child qualify for a family reunion residence permit under Law 13.445/2017. Not a temporary visa, not conditional — it is permanent residency from day one, with full right to work, study, and access public services.

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One-year fast-track to citizenship

The standard naturalization wait is 4 years. Article 66 of the Migration Law cuts that to just 1 year for foreigners who are parents of a Brazilian child — if they meet the language, background, and residency requirements.

Is this pathway for you?

Honest fit check before anyone packs a bag.

This route is legally clean and wildly affordable — but it demands real life changes and a planning runway. Here is who it actually works for.

Brazil birthright fits you well if…

  • You’re expecting a child — or planning pregnancy in the next 12–18 months — and flexible about where birth happens.
  • You want the cheapest legal family passport plan on the market (under $15K in most cases, all-in).
  • You’re open to spending 1+ years in Brazil to naturalize as a family — not just parking a visa.
  • You value a mid-tier passport (Henley ~19–20) with Schengen, UK, and most of Asia visa-free.
  • You’d like your child to grow up bilingual with a lifelong option to live anywhere in Mercosur.

Look elsewhere if…

  • You want a passport now without relocating. Brazil demands physical presence to naturalize — if you need speed, Vanuatu CBI (~60 days) is the right product.
  • You’re unwilling to learn basic Portuguese. The naturalization exam requires B1-level Portuguese fluency.
  • You’re past reproductive years and not open to legal adoption of a Brazilian minor — this specific program is built around a Brazilian-born child.
  • You’re chasing a zero-tax outcome. Brazil taxes worldwide income for residents (up to 27.5%). Panama or Paraguay suit tax-only goals better.
Two legal lanes

Both end in permanent residency. Pick based on where you are now.

You can start this process from inside Brazil (after the baby is born) or abroad before you travel. Both lead to the same outcome — a CRNM (Brazilian residence card) valid indefinitely.

VITEM XI Family Reunion Visa

Filed at a Brazilian consulate abroad
Entry visa
1-year entry visa — converts to permanent residency after arrival
  • Apply at the Brazilian consulate in your country of residence
  • Used when you need to enter Brazil and haven’t converted local status yet
  • Valid for up to 1 year for entry; renewable
  • Once in Brazil, register with the Federal Police within 90 days
  • Converts automatically to indefinite residency on arrival
  • Same 1-year naturalization fast-track applies
Best for: parents returning home after the birth, or applying from abroad with the child already recognised as Brazilian at a consulate.
Book a $100 call — VITEM XI →
The step-by-step pathway

From first call to Brazilian passport — nine plain-English steps.

This is the real sequence. Each step comes with the specific documents you need and what it costs.

1
Month −6 to −3 · Pre-arrival

Strategy call & city choice

We map your budget, healthcare preferences, and exit plan. Pick São Paulo (best private hospitals), Rio (lifestyle), Florianópolis (safest for families), or Curitiba (cheapest).

You’ll leave withNamed hospital shortlist, obstetrician contact, budget sheet, and a legal timeline signed by a Brazilian immigration attorney.
2
Month −3 to −1 · Documents prep

Apostille & sworn translations

Parents’ birth certificates, marriage certificate (if applicable), and clean criminal background checks must be apostilled in your home country and translated into Portuguese by a sworn translator (tradutor juramentado) in Brazil.

Documents listParents’ birth certs, marriage cert, FBI / national police clearance, valid passports (6+ months), proof of address.
3
Month −1 to 0 · Arrival

Enter Brazil on a tourist visa

Most Western nationalities enter visa-free or with an e-visa (USA, Canada, Australia, Japan since April 2025). 90-day stay standard, extendable by 90.

On arrivalRent a furnished apartment, open a mobile line, scout hospitals in person. Set up a private obstetric consultation to finalize delivery plan.
4
Month 0 · The birth

Deliver at a licensed Brazilian hospital

Public (SUS) is free and legally valid. Private costs $4K–$15K. Either way, the hospital files the Declaração de Nascido Vivo (live birth declaration) that triggers citizenship.

ResultYour child is Brazilian by birth under Article 12, I of the Federal Constitution. No application needed.
5
Week 1 post-birth

Register the birth at the cartório

Go to any Cartório de Registro Civil within 15 days with the hospital declaration. You get the Brazilian birth certificate (Certidão de Nascimento) — this is the document that anchors everything.

CostFree if registered within 15 days. Delayed registration incurs small fees.
6
Week 2–6 post-birth

File for family reunion residence permit

Both parents file with the Federal Police using the online SEI system. Pay the GRU fees, upload documents, book the biometric appointment. Protocol slip issued same day — you are legally resident from that moment.

Government feesGRU 140120 (R$204.77) + GRU 140066 (R$168.13) per parent. Total ~R$373 (~$75 USD per parent).
7
Month 2–4

Receive CRNM residence card

The physical CRNM (Carteira de Registro Nacional Migratório) is delivered by the Federal Police, typically within 4–8 weeks. This is your Brazilian ID — use it for CPF, bank accounts, tenancy, SUS healthcare.

ValidityCard is valid 9 years (renewable). Residence itself is indefinite.
8
Month 12+

File for naturalization

After 12 months of residency as parents of a Brazilian child, file the naturalization request under Law 13.445/2017 Article 66. Requirements: clean criminal record (home + Brazil), B1 Portuguese proficiency, evidence of lawful life in Brazil.

Government feesNaturalization fee R$822.69 per adult. Portuguese exam (CELPE-Bras) R$430.
9
Month 18–30

Swearing-in & Brazilian passport

Naturalization decisions take 12–18 months after filing. Swear-in at a federal court, receive your naturalization certificate, apply for the Brazilian passport at the Federal Police. The passport is issued in 6–10 business days.

Passport feeR$257.25 (adult, 10-year validity). Same process then opens for your spouse and the child already holds the passport from birth.
Full cost breakdown

What you actually spend — and on what.

These are transparent, published numbers. Legal fees are our own published range. No markup, no hidden costs.

ItemWho charges itCost (USD)
Private hospital delivery (São Paulo average)Brazilian hospital$4,000–$15,000
Or public (SUS) deliveryGovernment of Brazil$0
Apostilles & sworn translations (both parents)Home country + Brazilian translator$400–$900
Federal Police GRU fees (R$204.77 + R$168.13 × 2 parents)Government of Brazil~$150
Short-term furnished rental (3 months pre+post birth)Local landlord / AirBnB$2,500–$6,000
Attorney fees (full family, start-to-CRNM)Brazilian immigration law firm$3,000–$7,000
Portuguese course + CELPE-Bras exam (per adult)Language school + INEP$400–$1,200
Naturalization government fees (per adult)Ministry of Justice~$160
Brazilian passport (per person, 10-yr validity)Federal Police~$50
Strategy call (one-off, paid upfront)Find With Ankit$100
Total for a family of 3 (parents + newborn)~$10,760–$30,660

Range reflects public vs private hospital, city choice (São Paulo at top end, Curitiba/Florianópolis lower), and complexity. All figures verified against current Federal Police GRU codes (140120, 140066), Ministry of Justice published fees, and market advisory rates as of April 2026. FX: USD 1 = BRL 5.

The calendar

From kickoff call to a Brazilian passport in your family’s name.

Realistic, conservative timing — not the best-case marketing promise.

1
Week 0

Strategy call & legal retainer

$100 consultation. We sign you with a Brazilian immigration attorney and set the document list.

2
Month 1–3

Apostille & translation of documents

In parallel with pregnancy planning — done before arrival so nothing blocks the timeline.

3
Month 3–4

Arrival in Brazil on tourist status

Find housing, select hospital, begin prenatal care.

4
Month 5–9

Birth & cartório registration

Baby born. Birth certificate issued within 15 days. Child is now Brazilian.

5
Month 9–10

File with Federal Police for permanent residency

Both parents get protocol slips. Legally resident from day of filing.

6
Month 10–12

CRNM residence cards delivered

Full residency documented. Start banking, work, schooling.

7
Month 22+

File for naturalization

After 12 months as resident, file the naturalization request. Portuguese exam beforehand.

8
Month 30–42

Swearing-in & Brazilian passports issued

Entire family holds Brazilian passports — child from birth, parents by naturalization.

173
countries visa-free or visa-on-arrival with the Brazilian passport

The Brazilian passport ranks roughly 19th–20th on the Henley Passport Index — Schengen (90/180 days), the UK (6 months), most of Asia, all of Latin America, and visa-on-arrival in much of Africa. It also carries Mercosur residency rights — your child can freely live and work in Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay, Chile, Colombia, Peru, Ecuador, and Bolivia for life.

Schengen
90 days in 180 · visa-free
UK
6 months · visa-free
Mercosur
Residency rights across 8 countries
Dual OK
Brazil permits dual citizenship
Answers first

Questions we get every week.

Does my baby automatically become Brazilian — no application needed?
Yes. Under Article 12, I of Brazil’s 1988 Federal Constitution, any child born on Brazilian soil is Brazilian by birth. The hospital files the live-birth declaration, you register it at any Civil Registry (Cartório), and the Brazilian birth certificate is issued. No petition, no approval. The only exception is if you are a foreign diplomat in Brazil on official service.
Do I need a visa before flying to Brazil to give birth?
For most Western passport holders, no. US, Canadian, Australian, and Japanese travellers need an e-visa (reinstated April 2025); UK, EU, and many other nationals enter visa-free for 90 days. You give birth on tourist status and file for residency afterwards. Attorneys advise against pretending tourist purpose if you intend to give birth — Brazilian immigration law does not treat childbirth as an issue, and hospitals do not ask.
Is giving birth in a Brazilian public hospital legally valid for citizenship?
Absolutely. SUS (Sistema Único de Saúde) is Brazil’s public healthcare system and is constitutionally universal — any woman on Brazilian soil, tourist or resident, has the right to be received and deliver there, free of charge. The live-birth declaration from an SUS hospital is identical in law to one from a private hospital.
What’s the difference between VITEM XI and family reunion residence permit?
VITEM XI is an entry visa stamped at a Brazilian consulate abroad — used if you apply from outside Brazil. The family reunion residence permit is filed inside Brazil with the Federal Police, and is what most families end up using because they’re already in Brazil when the baby is born. Both lead to the same outcome: indefinite permanent residency documented by a CRNM card.
Can I apply for Brazilian citizenship after just 1 year?
Yes — under Article 66 of Law 13.445/2017. The normal naturalization wait is 4 years, but it is reduced to 1 year for parents of Brazilian children (also spouses of Brazilians, professionals of recognised ability, and people who have rendered service to Brazil). You still need to prove B1-level Portuguese, present clean criminal records, and show you actually resided in Brazil.
Does Brazil allow dual citizenship?
Yes — Brazil permits dual (and triple) citizenship. You do not have to renounce your original nationality to naturalize. Note that some other countries, such as India and China, do not allow dual citizenship — check your home country’s rules before naturalizing.
Do I have to live in Brazil the full year before naturalizing?
You have to be a resident — which means maintaining your CRNM and not abandoning residency. The law tolerates reasonable absences, but long or repeated trips abroad can reset or damage your case. As a practical rule, plan to spend a majority of days of the year in Brazil during that first residency year.
What Portuguese level do I need for naturalization?
The Ministry of Justice expects B1-level proficiency — enough to read, write, and hold a conversation. Most applicants take the CELPE-Bras exam administered by INEP. Expect 6–9 months of serious study if you’re starting from zero. In-person classes in Brazil are significantly cheaper than online equivalents abroad.
Will Brazil tax my worldwide income while I’m a resident?
Once you become a Brazilian tax resident — generally after 184 days in any 12-month window, or from the day you get a permanent visa — yes, Brazil taxes worldwide income at progressive rates up to 27.5%. Structuring around this (treaty planning, deferred recognition, strategic domicile) is something we walk through in the strategy call.
What does Find With Ankit actually do for me?
We are the strategy layer — we do not deliver babies and we are not your Brazilian attorney. In the $100 call we audit your situation, name a specific Brazilian law firm we’ve vetted, write the playbook (hospital, attorney, city, timeline), and stay on call through delivery and the CRNM. Our advisory engagement is $3,000–$7,000 depending on family complexity and the countries involved. The $100 call is credited against that fee if you hire us.

One $100 call. We’ll tell you if Brazil is actually your plan.

In 30 minutes, we pressure-test whether this pathway suits your family, budget, and timeline — or whether you should be looking at Vanuatu, Paraguay, or Portugal instead. The $100 is credited against your advisory fee if you hire us.

Book your $100 call now →
Find With Ankit

Global mobility advisory. Citizenship by investment, residency routes, family visas, and tax planning — done transparently.

Get in touch

Strategy calls by appointment only.

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Find With Ankit is an independent advisory brand. We are not a law firm and do not practice immigration law. All casework is handled by licensed Brazilian attorneys under separate engagement. Laws, fees, and processing times cited on this page reflect public sources as of April 2026 (Law 13.445/2017, Decree 9.199/2017, Federal Police GRU schedule, Ministry of Justice normative resolutions). Nothing on this page is a guarantee of immigration or tax outcomes. © 2026 Find With Ankit.
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