Brazil has enacted Law No. 15,270, on November 26, 2025, which fundamentally reshapes the tax treatment of dividends paid by Brazilian companies, with effect from January 1, 2026. The reform introduces a new 10% withholding income tax on profits and dividends remitted abroad and establishes transitional grandfather clause for previously accrued profits, alongside related measures affecting individuals residing in Brazil. Foreign investors with operations in Brazil should reassess dividend policies, approval timelines, and treaty positions in light of the new regime.
The core provision of the law is the creation of a 10% withholding income tax (IRRF) when the same company distributes more than BRL 50,000.00 in dividends to a Brazilian tax resident within the same month. Below this amount, distributions remain exempt.
However, profits and dividends “paid, credited, delivered, employed or remitted” to recipients abroad are subject to 10% withholding tax. This obligation applies regardless of the amount, marking a significant shift from the prior exemption regime for dividends distributed out of profits determined since 1996.
The law preserves a targeted grandfathering for profits connected to results accrued up to the 2025 fiscal year, provided that the corporate decision to distribute occurs by December 31, 2025, and the subsequent payment follows the terms originally approved. This timing rule is critical for boards and general meetings seeking to protect pre‑2026 profits from the new withholding mechanism.
In addition, the statute creates a specific relief when the combined burden on corporate profits and the new 10% withholding exceeds reference nominal rates. In such cases, a credit mechanism may be claimed, at the option of the non-resident beneficiary, calculated by comparing the payer’s effective corporate tax rate plus ten percentage points with benchmark nominal totals of 34%, 40% or 45%, depending on the sector. This is designed to mitigate excessive aggregate taxation on distributed profits. Details, including the option’s formalization and timing, will be set by regulation.
While the treaties are not amended by the law, the reform should be read in conjunction with double taxation treaties, which may reduce or eliminate Brazilian withholding tax or enable foreign tax credits in the investor’s jurisdiction, subject to treaty conditions and domestic rules. Cross‑border groups, holding companies and funds should revisit treaty entitlement and beneficial ownership analyses in anticipation of the new tax regime.
In practical terms, foreign investors should validate whether 2025 retained earnings can be distributed under the grandfathering clause, align corporate approvals by the end of 2025, model the cash impacts of the 10% WHT post‑2026, and evaluate access to statutory credit and treaty relief. Early alignment of governance calendars, treasury planning, and documentation will be essential to preserve shareholder value and reduce execution risk under Brazil’s new dividend tax framework.