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Brazil Bans the Use of Cryptocurrency for Regulated International Payments
The Central Bank of Brazil has officially prohibited the use of cryptocurrencies for settling payments in regulated cross border payment channels. Central Bank of Brazil limited the use of cryptocurrency for international payments in all regulated systems by virtue of Resolution 561, adopted on May 1, 2026.
With this announcement, there is now a definitive change to the previous ambiguity regarding the legality of cryptocurrencies in most of the financial systems across Latin America. When cryptocurrencies first came about, numerous fintechs and corporations took advantage of them almost immediately to establish ways to facilitate cross-border transactions.
The Crackdown on Shadow FX Channels
Under the new directive, the type of financial service to be provided electronically will not include any eFX services. Electronic providers are prohibited from using the virtual currency in their services for an international transaction. Rather, BCB mandates that all transactions must occur via traditional foreign exchange rates or non-resident accounts in Brazilian reals.
This action does not impose an outright prohibition against digital assets in the country; instead, it provides for a symbolic exclusion from cross-border regulated infrastructure. The main purpose of this initiative is to return these flows to the regulated National Financial System (SFN); therefore, they will be subject to the same level of oversight/taxes/reporting as traditional Fiat currency.
Stablecoins in Crosshairs
Brazil has passed this law at a time when its use of cryptocurrency is undergoing a significant transformation. With Brazil being Latin America’s largest cryptocurrency market, most trading is now conducted using stablecoins. Over 90% of the country’s total crypto trading volume is linked to stablecoins rather than other cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin.
Central Bank regulators have reported increasing concern that stablecoins are functioning as a “secondary currency” to escape from local capital controls. Through the specific inclusion of stablecoin transactions as “foreign exchange operations,” BCB is making sure that any stablecoins which are pegged to either the US Dollar or other fiat currencies will have the same legal status as trading real cash.
Compliance and the Road Ahead
The regulatory environment for Virtual Asset Service Providers (“VASPs”) is transitioning from rapid growth into an era of heavy compliance. From mid-2026 onwards, there will be comprehensive monitoring of all conversions from virtual assets to US dollars and an obligation to formally report each conversion to the central bank.
Some believe this could raise consumer costs while others counter that it creates legal certainty that will accelerate institutional adoption of cryptocurrency. The clarity of regulation offers Brazil conformity with international standards established by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), thus setting in motion the complete integration of Brazil’s Digital Real (Drex) into the global marketplace.
Conclusion
Brazil has made a bold move by closing off its regulated international payment options from cryptocurrencies. This is an effort to create a better balance between innovation and the system’s overall safety and security. The world of cryptocurrencies will be observing Brazil, as they are leading the charge on regulating how countries are developing or directing regulatory guidance over the “stablecoin-powered” remittance marketplace.