Brazil’s new income tax rules, signed into law in November, take effect on 1 January 2026 and will reshape the tax burden for millions of wage earners, investors and high-income taxpayers. The reform raises the monthly income exemption and introduces new rules aimed at offsetting revenue losses by taxing the top earners and large dividend payments.
Brazil income tax reform and who benefits
The most immediate change is a rise in the monthly exemption threshold. Individuals earning up to R$5,000 per month will be fully exempt from income tax; the previous exemption stopped at two minimum wages (R$3,036). The government estimates roughly 15 million people will become fully exempt, representing a fiscal renunciation of about R$25.4 billion. Workers in this bracket may save up to R$4,000 a year when the thirteenth salary is included.
The law also creates a transitional band between R$5,000.01 and R$7,350 per month that delivers a gradually decreasing relief. That design aims to avoid abrupt tax jumps when salaries increase. Practical examples provided by tax authorities include an estimated 75% monthly tax reduction for a R$5,500 salary, around R$1,470 annual savings for a R$6,500 salary, and roughly R$600 annual savings for a R$7,000 salary. Exact impacts depend on individual deductions and other income sources.
What high earners and investors should watch
To offset the revenue loss from broader exemptions, the reform introduces a minimum personal income tax (IRPFM) for high earners. It applies to taxpayers with annual incomes above R$600,000 (R$50,000 per month) and features a progressive rate that can reach an effective minimum of 10% for those with more than R$1.2 million a year. The government expects approximately 141,000 taxpayers to be affected.
The IRPFM calculation includes salaries, dividends, and taxable investment returns, but provides credit for income tax already withheld at source on wages taxed at 27.5%. Several investment types remain excluded from the IRPFM base, including savings accounts, LCI, LCA, certain real-estate and agribusiness incentive funds, as well as inheritances, donations and specified compensation for serious illness. Gains on the sale of residential property retain their special rules, except those traded outside the stock market.
A further notable change is the taxation of dividends at source. Dividends paid by a single company to an individual that exceed R$50,000 per month will have 10% withheld at source. The measure targets large distributions to company owners and will not affect most retail investors. Any withholding can be offset in the annual tax return.
The timing of application matters. Withholding changes affecting salaries take effect from the January payroll paid in late January or early February 2026. However, the annual individual tax return for 2026 (filed in 2027) will be the first to reflect the reformed rules definitively. Declarations filed in 2026 cover the 2025 tax year, when the old rules applied.
Experts have warned of potential legal disputes, particularly relating to dividends. Distributions tied to profits earned up to 2025 remain exempt only if the distribution was approved by 31 December 2025. Litigation may arise over whether that provision creates an unintended retroactive effect.
Overall, the reform delivers immediate relief to low and middle-income earners while shifting part of the burden to high-income individuals and sizeable dividend recipients. Taxpayers and advisers should review payroll withholding early in 2026 and prepare for the IRPFM calculation in the 2027 tax filing.
Key Takeaways:
- Brazil income tax reform raises monthly exemption to R$5,000, fully exempting about 15 million workers.
- Partial relief applies up to R$7,350, while a minimum tax targets annual incomes above R$600,000.
- Dividend withholding of 10% applies for single-company payments above R$50,000 per month.

















