Practice Area

Start a Business in Brazil — Corporate Lawyer for Foreigners

Open business in Brazil as foreigner. Legal structuring, company formation, contracts & compliance for international entrepreneurs.

By Zachariah Zagol, OAB/SP 351.356 Last updated:

15+

Years of experience

700+

Cases managed

2

Languages (PT/EN)

USC

LL.M. Degree

What Does a Corporate Lawyer Do for Foreign Entrepreneurs in Brazil?

A corporate lawyer for foreign entrepreneurs in Brazil structures business entities, drafts commercial agreements, ensures regulatory compliance, and protects assets across jurisdictions. Brazil ranked 124th out of 190 countries in the World Bank’s ease-of-doing-business index before its discontinuation — the regulatory complexity makes professional legal guidance essential, not optional. In 2024, Brazil registered over 3.9 million new companies (Receita Federal/CNPJ data), and foreign direct investment reached US$66 billion (Banco Central do Brasil).

Our founder, Zachariah Zagol (OAB/SP 351.356), is himself an entrepreneur managing multiple businesses in Brazil. He combines deep legal expertise with practical business judgment forged through years of operating in the Brazilian market. He holds an LL.M. from USC Gould School of Law.

“I don’t just advise entrepreneurs — I am one. I’ve formed companies, negotiated leases, hired teams, dealt with the Receita Federal, and managed cash flow in Brazil. That operational experience shapes every piece of corporate advice I give.” — Zachariah Zagol, Founding Partner, OAB/SP 351.356

How Should a Foreign Entrepreneur Structure a Company in Brazil?

The right corporate structure determines tax efficiency, liability protection, and eventual exit potential. Brazil’s Código Civil (Lei nº 10.406/2002) and the Lei da Liberdade Econômica (Lei nº 13.874/2019) govern entity formation.

Entity types for foreign investors:

  • Sociedade Limitada (Ltda.) — most common entity (approximately 75% of Brazilian companies); flexible governance, no minimum capital, 2+ quotaholders
  • Sociedade Limitada Unipessoal (SLU) — single-member LLC; no minimum capital; introduced by Lei nº 13.874/2019
  • Sociedade Anônima (S.A.) — required for companies with more than 7 shareholders or those seeking capital markets; governed by Lei nº 6.404/1976
  • Holding company structures — for asset protection, estate planning, and multi-entity management; can reduce effective ITCMD rates by 50% or more through legitimate succession planning
  • Brazilian subsidiaries for foreign companies — requires Banco Central registration of capital investment via SISBACEN and compliance with Lei nº 4.131/1962

Key formation requirements:

  • CPF registration for all foreign quotaholders (Receita Federal)
  • Capital investment registration with the Banco Central do Brasil
  • Contrato social (operating agreement) registered with the Junta Comercial
  • CNPJ (corporate tax ID) issuance: 1–3 business days
  • Municipal alvará (operating permit) and state licensing

What Types of Commercial Contracts Do Brazilian Businesses Need?

Generic contracts under Brazilian law are frequently challenged and invalidated by courts. The Superior Tribunal de Justiça (STJ) consistently holds that contracts must comply with the principles of good faith (boa-fé objetiva) and social function (função social do contrato) established in Arts. 421–422 of the Código Civil.

We prepare and negotiate:

  • Vendor and supplier agreements with clear payment terms, quality standards, and termination rights
  • Customer contracts and service level agreements (SLAs) defining obligations and remedies
  • Distribution and franchise agreements balancing exclusivity with performance obligations
  • Employment agreements compliant with the CLT (Consolidação das Leis do Trabalho) — Brazil’s labor code mandates 13th salary, 30-day paid vacation, FGTS (8% employer contribution), and INSS social security
  • Confidentiality and non-compete agreements — Brazilian courts enforce non-competes only when limited in scope, geography, and duration (typically max 2 years) with adequate compensation per TST jurisprudence
  • Partnership and shareholders’ agreements (acordo de quotistas/acionistas)

How Do Mergers and Acquisitions Work in Brazil?

M&A transactions in Brazil require due diligence across legal, tax, labor, and regulatory dimensions. Brazil recorded approximately 1,600 M&A transactions in 2024, with deal volume exceeding R$270 billion (TTR Data). The Conselho Administrativo de Defesa Econômica (CADE) reviews transactions meeting notification thresholds (combined group revenue of R$750 million + R$75 million).

M&A services:

  • Pre-acquisition due diligence — legal, financial, regulatory, environmental, labor (Brazilian labor contingencies average 4–8% of acquisition value in reserves)
  • Deal structuring: asset purchase vs. quota purchase, earn-outs, seller financing, escrow arrangements
  • CADE notification when applicable (average review timeline: 30–90 days for non-complex cases)
  • Tax structuring — capital gains on quota sales taxed at 15–22.5% for individuals, 34% for corporate sellers under Lucro Real
  • Integration planning and transition service agreements
  • Cross-border M&A with inbound foreign investment registration

What Corporate Governance Requirements Apply in Brazil?

Strong governance protects directors, attracts investors, and enables scaled operations. Brazilian corporate governance is regulated by the Código Civil, Lei das S.A. (6.404/76), and the CVM (Comissão de Valores Mobiliários) for publicly traded companies.

Governance requirements include:

  • Annual quotaholder/shareholder meetings and proper minutes documentation
  • Mandatory accounting and fiscal council (conselho fiscal) upon minority request under Art. 1.066 of the Código Civil
  • Director liability protection — Brazilian law holds directors personally liable for acts exceeding their authority or violating the contrato social (Art. 1.016, CC)
  • D&O (directors and officers) liability insurance — increasingly common, covering personal liability from shareholder suits, regulatory proceedings, and employee claims
  • LGPD (Lei nº 13.709/2018) compliance — Brazil’s data protection law imposes fines up to 2% of revenue (capped at R$50 million per infraction) for data processing violations; enforcement by the ANPD (Autoridade Nacional de Proteção de Dados) has intensified since 2023

For foreign-controlled companies, we ensure Brazilian subsidiaries maintain appropriate local governance while supporting parent company oversight and reporting obligations.

What Happens When a Brazilian Company Faces Financial Distress?

Brazilian judicial recovery (recuperação judicial), governed by Lei nº 11.101/2005 as amended by Lei nº 14.112/2020, provides financially distressed companies an alternative to liquidation. In 2024, Brazil recorded approximately 2,300 judicial recovery filings — a 68% increase over 2023 (Serasa Experian).

Restructuring services:

  • Judicial recovery petition preparation and representation before the vara empresarial
  • Creditor negotiation and restructuring plan design (plano de recuperação) — must achieve approval by qualified majority of creditors within 180 days
  • Out-of-court restructuring (recuperação extrajudicial) under Art. 162 of Lei nº 11.101/2005
  • Asset sales and going-concern transactions
  • Bankruptcy (falência) defense and liquidation proceedings when recovery is not viable

“Corporate law is not a commodity. The difference between a well-structured company and a legal disaster often comes down to whether your lawyer actually understands the Brazilian business environment from the inside.” — Zachariah Zagol, Founding Partner, OAB/SP 351.356

Explore Our Specialized Guides

Why trust ZS Advogados?

Our founding partner, Zachariah Zagol, is an American who has lived in Brazil for over 15 years, with an LL.M. from USC and hands-on experience as an entrepreneur and investor. He doesn't just study the law — he lives what he advises. That combination of theory and practice is what sets our service apart.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a foreigner open a company in Brazil?
Yes. Brazilian law permits foreign nationals and foreign companies to establish businesses in Brazil with no local partner requirement. The most common entity type is the Sociedade Limitada (Ltda.), equivalent to a US LLC. Foreign investors must obtain a CPF (tax ID) and register the capital investment with the Banco Central do Brasil via SISBACEN. The entire company formation process typically takes 15–45 days, depending on the state and municipal licensing requirements.
What is the minimum investment to start a business in Brazil?
There is no statutory minimum capital requirement for a Sociedade Limitada (Ltda.) in Brazil. However, the VITEM IX investor visa requires a minimum investment of R$500,000 (approximately US$100,000) registered with the Banco Central. For technology startups qualifying under Resolução CNIg nº 36/2018, the reduced threshold is R$150,000. Practical startup costs including legal fees, registration, and initial compliance typically range from R$15,000 to R$50,000.
What types of companies can foreigners create in Brazil?
The main entity types available to foreigners are: Sociedade Limitada (Ltda.) — the most common, similar to a US LLC with flexible governance; Sociedade Anônima (S.A.) — required for companies seeking public capital markets or exceeding certain revenue thresholds; EIRELI — single-member entity requiring minimum capital of 100× the minimum wage (R$141,200 in 2026); and Sociedade Limitada Unipessoal (SLU) — single-member LLC with no minimum capital, introduced by Lei nº 13.874/2019 (Lei da Liberdade Econômica).
How long does it take to register a company in Brazil?
Company registration in Brazil takes 15–45 days on average. The process involves: obtaining a CPF from the Receita Federal (1–5 days), drafting and notarizing the contrato social (operating agreement), registering with the Junta Comercial (state commercial registry, 3–10 days), obtaining a CNPJ from the Receita Federal (1–3 days), and securing municipal and state licenses (5–30 days depending on activity type). São Paulo state processes tend toward the faster end due to digital registration systems.
Do I need a Brazilian partner to start a business in Brazil?
No. Since Lei nº 13.874/2019 (Lei da Liberdade Econômica), a foreign individual can form a Sociedade Limitada Unipessoal (single-member LLC) without any Brazilian partner. However, you must appoint a legal representative (procurador) resident in Brazil who is authorized to receive legal notices and act on your behalf before government agencies. This representative does not need to be a business partner or shareholder.
What taxes does a foreign-owned company pay in Brazil?
Brazilian corporate taxation depends on the tax regime elected. Simples Nacional (for companies with annual revenue up to R$4.8 million) offers combined rates of 4–33%. Lucro Presumido applies presumed profit margins (8–32% depending on activity) with effective rates of approximately 11–17%. Lucro Real requires full accounting and applies a 15% corporate income tax (IRPJ) plus 9% social contribution (CSLL), totaling approximately 34% on actual profit. Most foreign-owned businesses use Lucro Presumido due to its simplicity.

Specialized Services

Explore Our Start a Business in Brazil — Corporate Lawyer for Foreigners Services

Deep-dive guides written for foreigners navigating the Brazilian legal system.

Starting a Business in Brazil as a Foreigner: Complete 2026 Guide

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Buying a Business in Brazil: Due Diligence Checklist for Foreign Buyers

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Corporate Governance for Brazilian Companies

Board structures, shareholder agreements, minority protections, family business governance, succession planning.

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LGPD Compliance — Brazil's Data Protection Law

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Holding Companies & Asset Protection in Brazil

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Hiring Employees in Brazil: Labor Law Obligations Every Foreign Employer Must Know

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How to Get a CPF as a Foreigner (From Abroad or in Brazil): 2026 Guide

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LTDA vs S.A. vs SLU: Which Brazilian Entity Is Right for You?

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Simples Nacional, Lucro Presumido, Lucro Real: Brazilian Tax Regime Decision Guide

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Joint Venture vs. Subsidiary vs. Licensing in Brazil

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Brazil Tax Reform: Old System vs. New IBS/CBS (2026-2033)

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How to Choose a Business Lawyer for Company Formation

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6 Questions About Your Brazilian Business Structure

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