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How to get a CNPJ in Brazil as a foreign investor

07/05/2026

Guilherme Chambarelli

For many international entrepreneurs, obtaining a Brazilian CNPJ is the first real step toward entering the Brazilian market.

Whether the goal is to open a subsidiary, operate locally, hire employees, issue invoices, open bank accounts, or expand business operations into Latin America, the CNPJ becomes the legal identity of the company in Brazil.

However, for foreign investors, the process involves more than simply filing incorporation documents.

Brazil has a highly regulated corporate and tax system, especially when foreign ownership is involved.

Understanding the correct structure from the beginning is essential to avoid delays, compliance issues, and future operational problems.

What Is a CNPJ?

The CNPJ (“Cadastro Nacional da Pessoa Jurídica”) is the Brazilian corporate taxpayer identification number issued by the Brazilian Federal Revenue Service (Receita Federal).

It functions similarly to:

  • an EIN in the United States;
  • a VAT/company registration number in Europe;
  • a corporate tax ID in other jurisdictions.

Without a CNPJ, a company generally cannot:

  • legally operate in Brazil;
  • issue invoices;
  • open bank accounts;
  • hire employees;
  • enter commercial agreements;
  • pay taxes;
  • obtain operating licenses.

In practice, the CNPJ is the company’s formal legal existence before Brazilian authorities.

Can a Foreign Investor Obtain a CNPJ?

Yes.

Foreign individuals and foreign companies may fully own Brazilian entities and obtain a CNPJ.

Brazil allows 100% foreign ownership in most sectors of the economy.

A foreign investor does not need a Brazilian shareholder to incorporate a company.

However, Brazilian law requires foreign shareholders to comply with specific registration and representation requirements before the incorporation process can be completed.

Step 1: Obtain a CPF or Foreign Shareholder Registration

Before the Brazilian company itself receives a CNPJ, the foreign shareholder must first be registered in Brazil.

Foreign Individuals

Foreign individuals generally need a CPF (“Cadastro de Pessoas Físicas”), which is the Brazilian tax identification number for individuals.

The CPF is required for:

  • becoming a shareholder;
  • signing corporate documents;
  • registering investments;
  • interacting with Brazilian authorities.

Foreign Companies

If the shareholder is a foreign legal entity, registration before the Brazilian Federal Revenue Service is also required.

This process involves:

  • corporate documentation of the foreign entity;
  • beneficial ownership information;
  • legalized and apostilled documents;
  • sworn translations into Portuguese.

Step 2: Appoint a Legal Representative in Brazil

Brazilian law requires foreign investors to appoint a legal representative residing in Brazil.

This representative acts before:

  • the Federal Revenue Service;
  • the Central Bank of Brazil;
  • commercial registries;
  • regulatory authorities.

The appointment is made through a Power of Attorney, usually with powers to:

  • represent the foreign shareholder administratively;
  • receive legal and tax notifications;
  • assist with incorporation procedures.

Importantly, this representative does not become a shareholder merely by acting in this role.

The foreign investor remains the owner of the company.

Step 3: Prepare the Corporate Structure

At this stage, the company’s legal structure is defined.

This includes:

  • business activity selection (CNAEs);
  • tax regime analysis;
  • governance structure;
  • ownership percentages;
  • operational model;
  • capital contribution structure.

This phase is critical because tax and regulatory consequences in Brazil vary significantly depending on how the company is structured.

An inadequate setup may generate:

  • excessive taxation;
  • licensing problems;
  • banking restrictions;
  • operational inefficiencies.

Step 4: Draft the Articles of Incorporation

The Articles of Incorporation establish the company’s legal framework.

The document generally includes:

  • corporate purpose;
  • shareholder structure;
  • management rules;
  • capital contributions;
  • governance provisions;
  • legal representation.

According to our incorporation workflow, this phase is one of the central stages of the process and is typically coordinated alongside address and registration analysis.

Step 5: Register the Company Before the Commercial Registry

Once the documents are executed and legalized, the company is filed before the relevant Commercial Registry (“Junta Comercial”).

After approval:

  • the company becomes legally incorporated;
  • the CNPJ is issued;
  • the company officially exists before Brazilian authorities.

As described in our incorporation structure materials, this registration phase is directly tied to obtaining the Brazilian company’s tax ID.

Step 6: Register the Foreign Investment Before the Central Bank

Foreign investments in Brazilian companies must be registered before the Central Bank of Brazil through the RDE-IED system.

This registration is essential for:

  • profit remittances abroad;
  • capital repatriation;
  • international compliance;
  • future exits or acquisitions.

Failure to properly register the investment may create significant legal and tax complications later.

Required Documents for Foreign Investors

The incorporation process generally requires:

  • passport copies;
  • proof of address;
  • corporate documents of foreign shareholders;
  • apostilled documents;
  • sworn translations into Portuguese;
  • Power of Attorney documentation.

According to our operational structure, the timeline heavily depends on the proper submission and legalization of these documents.

How Long Does the Process Take?

The timeframe varies depending on:

  • the state of incorporation;
  • banking compliance procedures;
  • licensing requirements;
  • document legalization timing;
  • business activity complexity.

In many cases, the incorporation itself can be completed relatively quickly, while banking and regulatory stages may take longer.

The Real Challenge Is Not the CNPJ — It Is the Structure Behind It

Many foreign entrepreneurs focus exclusively on “getting a CNPJ.”

But the CNPJ itself is only one piece of a much larger legal and operational structure.

The real strategic questions involve:

  • how profits will be taxed;
  • how money will be remitted abroad;
  • how banking compliance will be handled;
  • how contracts will be structured;
  • how liabilities will be isolated;
  • how future expansion will occur.

A company can be incorporated in days.

Fixing a poorly structured operation later may take years.

How Chambarelli Advogados Assists Foreign Investors

At Chambarelli Advogados, our Foreign Desk assists international entrepreneurs, startups, holding companies, and multinational groups throughout the entire incorporation and market-entry process in Brazil.

Our services include:

  • CPF and foreign shareholder registrations;
  • company incorporation;
  • legal representation;
  • tax structuring;
  • foreign investment registration;
  • banking support;
  • corporate governance;
  • ongoing legal advisory.

As reflected in our institutional proposal, our mission is to support businesses not only as legal advisors, but as long-term strategic partners in navigating the Brazilian market.

Final Thoughts

Obtaining a CNPJ in Brazil as a foreign investor is entirely possible.

But successful market entry depends on much more than registration alone.

Brazil rewards businesses that enter the market with proper legal structure, tax planning, operational strategy, and local support from the beginning.

The companies that grow sustainably in Brazil are rarely the ones that simply incorporated quickly.

They are the ones that structured correctly from day one.

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