03 · Opening an account
Resident or non-resident — the rules diverge fast.
Whether you can open a Brazilian bank account, what kind of account, and what you can do with it depends entirely on your immigration status. The Banco Central do Brasil (BCB) divides foreign account-holders into three rough categories and the bank you walk into will be running all of you against the same internal compliance flowchart.
Category one — non-resident with CPF
You have a CPF but no Brazilian residence permit. The traditional big banks will open you a non-resident account under BCB Resolution 4.373 — these accounts are restricted, oriented toward investment, and have lower limits and more paperwork. Nubank, Inter and C6 will not open an account for you in most cases — their KYC flow requires a Brazilian address and a residence record. The practical workaround for buyers in this category is to operate through your future property's CNPJ (a Brazilian holding company that owns the apartment) or to hold money at Santander, which has the most foreigner-friendly desk among the big five.
Category two — resident with RNM
You have a Brazilian residence permit (RNM, formerly RNE) — investor visa, family reunion, work permit, retirement visa. You are treated as a Brazilian for banking purposes. Every bank in the country will open you any account they offer, with full PIX, full credit cards, full mortgages. This is by far the easiest position to be in, and it's why so many of our clients pursue an investor visa shortly after closing on the property. The minimum investment for the VITEM XIV/IX visa changed in 2023 and currently sits at R$700,000 for real estate in capital cities; it's an entire separate guide, but the banking-side payoff is substantial.
Category three — corporate account (CNPJ)
You buy the property through a Brazilian holding company (a Sociedade Limitada or, more commonly for our clients, a Sociedade Unipessoal de Responsabilidade Limitada). The company has a CNPJ — the Brazilian tax-ID for legal entities — and the bank account is opened in the company's name. Foreign directors are fine. Most of our high-end transactions run through this structure because it neutralises the inheritance question, simplifies short-term rental income reporting, and allows the property to be transferred later by transferring shares rather than re-registering the title.
What every bank asks for at opening: passport, CPF (yours and any spouse on the account), proof of address (Brazilian utility bill or a notarised lease), proof of income (last three months of payslips or, for non-residents, a bank statement from your home country), source-of-funds declaration if the opening deposit is over roughly US$10,000 equivalent. The process takes between 20 minutes (Nubank, end-to-end in the app) and three weeks (Caixa or Bradesco for a corporate account with foreign directors). Plan accordingly.