Brazil has entered a decisive transitional year for its consumption tax framework with the operational testing of the new dual value-added tax in 2026. From 1 January, companies issuing invoices will face real financial movement under the new system as authorities begin to collect a test-rate IVA Dual composed of a federal Contribution on Goods and Services (CBS) and a state/municipal Tax on Goods and Services (IBS).
Brazil tax reform 2026 practical steps for businesses
The combined test rate for 2026 is 1%: 0.9% CBS and 0.1% IBS. The sums paid under these headings will be offset against current federal levies such as PIS and Cofins so that there is no effective increase in tax burden this year. Nevertheless, the year will function as a full dress rehearsal ahead of the progressive extinction of five existing consumption taxes from 2027: PIS, Cofins, IPI, ICMS and ISS. The CBS will replace PIS, Cofins and IPI, while the IBS will replace ICMS and ISS.
Despite the temporary nature of the rates, obligations are immediate. Invoices must show CBS and IBS separately and include new mandatory fields. Management information systems and fiscal document software will need updates to query tax rules in real time and validate classifications. Errors in NCM codes, CNAE listings or tax registration can block invoice issuance, cause incorrect tax collection and disrupt cash flow.
Companies that fail to adapt risk invoice rejection, operational stoppages and later tax assessments. Recognising implementation challenges, the Federal Revenue Service and the IBS management committee announced a temporary suspension of automatic penalties until the first day of the fourth month after the publication of implementing regulations. Still, authorities recommend complying fully from January to avoid future inconsistencies when full enforcement begins.
Operational and contractual impact
Two practical changes require urgent attention. First, the split payment mechanism will separate tax at the point of payment so that tax amounts are routed directly to the treasury instead of passing through the seller’s bank account. Although mandatory only from 2027, businesses should adjust cash flow planning and working capital models in 2026.
Second, contracts and supplier terms must be reviewed. Firms should update clauses on tax passthrough and credit entitlement under the non-cumulative IVA model, which eliminates cascading taxation and alters credit generation and utilisation.
Sectoral effects and special rules
Producers with annual turnover up to R$3.6 million remain exempt. Larger rural producers will join the IVA regime and may face an effective rate that could approach current estimates for some goods. Seeds and fertilisers are expected to remain exempt, while basic food inputs will receive a substantial reduction from the general IVA rate.
Import taxation will migrate to the CBS and IBS basis to align foreign goods and services with domestic tax treatment. The government’s estimates point to a full IVA structure that could reach near current headline rates for some categories once the transition completes in 2027, though 2026 remains a compensation year without added burden.
From July 2026, individuals treated as habitual contributors to CBS and IBS must register on the National Register of Legal Entities (CNPJ) to aid tax reporting. Authorities will also gather data on property transactions and rental incomes ahead of 2027 rules for real estate sales and leasing.
Tax professionals and company finance teams should treat 2026 not as a pause but as a compulsory operational trial. Updating systems, training staff, revising contracts and checking fiscal classifications now will reduce disruption when the new tax architecture becomes fully effective next year.
Key Takeaways:
- Brazil begins practical testing of the new IVA Dual in 2026 with a combined test rate of 1% (0.9% CBS and 0.1% IBS).
- 2026 is a real-operation trial with financial movement, new invoice fields and mandatory system updates; full substitution of five consumption taxes starts in 2027.
- Businesses must adapt invoicing, update classifications (NCM/CNAE), review contracts and prepare for split payment and cash flow changes.
- Importers, producers and individuals with habitual activity face new rules; authorities have delayed immediate penalties but advise full compliance from January.

















