Key Takeaway
Brazil received over USD 4 billion in US remittances last year. We unpacked PIX delivery, the 0.38% IOF tax that surprises every first-time sender, and which of the 10+ available providers actually delivers the most reais per dollar.
In this guide (9 sections)
- Sending Money to Brazil: PIX Made It Fast, IOF Made It Taxed
- Best Providers for Sending Money to Brazil
- How PIX Works (and Why It Changed Everything)
- The IOF Tax: 0.38% You Cannot Avoid
- Brazilian Banks and What Your Recipient Should Know
- The Brazilian Diaspora in the US: Why This Corridor Looks Different
- Common Mistakes That Cost First-Time Senders Money
- Sources & Methodology
- Frequently Asked Questions
In this guide
- Sending Money to Brazil: PIX Made It Fast, IOF Made It Taxed
- Best Providers for Sending Money to Brazil
- How PIX Works (and Why It Changed Everything)
- The IOF Tax: 0.38% You Cannot Avoid
- Brazilian Banks and What Your Recipient Should Know
- The Brazilian Diaspora in the US: Why This Corridor Looks Different
- Common Mistakes That Cost First-Time Senders Money
- Sources & Methodology
- Frequently Asked Questions
Sending Money to Brazil: PIX Made It Fast, IOF Made It Taxed
Quick answer: The cheapest way to send money from the US to Brazil is Wise — mid-market USD/BRL rate with 0% markup and a fee of USD 5–8 on USD 1,000, delivered via PIX in seconds. Remitly Express is competitive on smaller amounts (USD 100–500) with frequent zero-fee promotions. Brazil charges a 0.38% IOF tax on every inbound foreign-currency conversion — automatically deducted by the receiving Brazilian bank, applied to all providers including Wise, Remitly, Xoom, and US bank wires alike. On USD 1,000 that is roughly BRL 19 deducted unavoidably. PIX delivery (Brazil's instant payment rail launched 2020, now used by 160+ million Brazilians) means transfers settle within seconds 24/7. Compare live USD to BRL rates →
The US–Brazil corridor doesn't fit the typical "remittance to a developing country" template. Brazil isn't poor: it's the world's ninth-largest economy by GDP and operates one of the most modern domestic payment systems on the planet. Banco Central do Brasil launched PIX in November 2020, and within four years it became the dominant way Brazilians move money — over 160 million users (roughly 80% of all adults) and over 5 billion transactions per month, more than the country's debit card and TED transfers combined.
Two structural facts shape this corridor in 2026. First, PIX has changed receive-side delivery from "1–2 business days via TED" to "seconds, 24/7" for most US digital providers (Wise, Remitly, Xoom, Boss Money, Western Union all now route final-mile through PIX). Second, Brazil charges a 0.38% IOF (Imposto sobre Operações Financeiras) on every inbound USD→BRL conversion — a federal tax automatically deducted at the moment of FX. It's small in percentage terms but it's the single most-asked-about line item from first-time senders, because it appears as a deduction on the recipient's bank statement that doesn't show up in the provider's quote screen.
This guide covers exactly what to expect: which providers actually win on USD→BRL today, how PIX delivery works end-to-end, what the IOF tax is and why you can't avoid it, the diaspora-economics realities of the Florida-Massachusetts-New York Brazilian-American corridors, and the common mistakes that cost first-time senders BRL 50–200 per transfer.
Best Providers for Sending Money to Brazil
Quick Comparison: USD to BRL Providers (USD 1,000 transfer)
| Category | Provider | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Cheapest overall | Wise | Mid-market USD/BRL rate, 0% markup. USD 5–8 fee. PIX delivery in seconds |
| Best for < USD 500 | Remitly | USD 0–3.99 fee with Express PIX delivery. Frequent first-transfer promo zero-markup deals |
| Strong PIX coverage | Xoom | PayPal-owned, USD 0 fee but 1.5–3% markup. Best if you already use PayPal balance |
| Latin America specialist | Boss Money | Deep Brazilian-side relationships, often competitive on FX markup. Strong on smaller transfers |
| Cash pickup | Western Union / MoneyGram | Banco do Brasil, Caixa Econômica, Bradesco branches. 1.5–3% markup, useful if recipient unbanked |
| Avoid | US bank wires | USD 40–50 fee + 3–5% FX markup = USD 70–90 total cost on USD 1,000 vs USD 5–8 with Wise |
Based on real scraped quotes refreshed every 6 hours. Compare live rates →
Wise — The Default for Bank-Account Recipients
If your recipient has a Brazilian bank account (and 85% of adult Brazilians do, according to Banco Central do Brasil financial inclusion data), Wise is structurally the cheapest option. The fee on USD 1,000 is roughly USD 5–8, the FX rate is the live mid-market rate from Banco Central's PTAX feed, and delivery is via PIX — typically under 30 minutes end-to-end including US-side ACH clearing, sometimes under 5 minutes with debit-card funding.
Wise's PIX integration accepts all PIX key types: CPF, phone number, email, or random key (chave aleatória). You enter the key in the recipient screen; Wise looks up the registered Brazilian bank automatically. Wise has been actively expanding Brazilian-side liquidity since 2022 and is now one of the largest non-bank originators of inbound PIX volume in the country.
Remitly — Better for Small or First Transfers
For amounts under USD 500, Remitly's flat-fee structure (USD 0–3.99) often delivers more BRL than Wise's percentage fee. Remitly also runs aggressive first-transfer promotional rates — sometimes pricing at exact mid-market for the first send to acquire the customer. If you're sending USD 100–300 monthly to family, signing up for Remitly to capture the first-transfer promo (which typically delivers BRL 10–30 more on USD 200 than Wise's standard pricing) and then comparing both for subsequent transfers is the rational play.
Remitly's Express tier delivers via PIX in minutes; the Economy tier (3–5 business days) routes through TED-style bank transfers and is rarely worth the savings on the BRL corridor since PIX has compressed delivery times across the board.
Xoom — If You Already Use PayPal
Xoom is owned by PayPal and integrates directly with PayPal balances, which can be useful if you already hold USD in PayPal (e.g., from US-based freelance work). The fee is typically USD 0 but the FX markup is 1.5–3% — meaning Xoom is rarely the absolute cheapest, but it can be the most convenient if you'd otherwise need to move money out of PayPal first. Funds delivered via PIX, typically within the hour.
Boss Money — The Specialist Underdog
Boss Money (subsidiary of NYSE-listed IDT Corporation) has built deep relationships across Latin America including Brazil. Their pricing is competitive — typically matching or slightly beating Wise on small transfers — and they offer Portuguese-language customer service that the larger providers don't always staff well. Their PIX delivery is solid. Worth comparing for any USD–BRL transfer, especially the first.
Western Union, MoneyGram — Cash Pickup Only
If your recipient is unbanked or temporarily without a CPF (e.g., a recent return migrant), Western Union and MoneyGram offer cash pickup at thousands of Brazilian agent locations including Banco do Brasil, Caixa Econômica Federal, Bradesco, Itaú, and Lojas Americanas. The FX markup is 1.5–3% — substantially worse than Wise — so use only when bank delivery isn't an option.
What to Avoid: US Bank Wires
Chase, Bank of America, and Wells Fargo all charge USD 40–50 per international wire plus 3–5% FX markup. On a USD 1,000 transfer to Brazil, that's USD 70–90 in total cost, vs USD 5–8 with Wise. Over 12 monthly transfers, the difference is USD 750–1,000 a year — money that could have gone to your family in São Paulo or Rio instead. The only legitimate use case for a US bank wire to Brazil is amounts above USD 50,000 where SWIFT's regulatory clarity matters (e.g., property purchase) — and even then, Wise handles up to USD ~1M per transfer with proper documentation.
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How PIX Works (and Why It Changed Everything)
PIX is Brazil's central-bank-operated instant payments rail, launched November 16, 2020 by Banco Central do Brasil. Within four years it became the dominant payment method in the country — not just for international remittances, but for groceries, rent, business invoices, and tipping. Understanding PIX matters because it's now the default delivery method for every major US-to-Brazil money transfer provider.
What a PIX Key Is
A PIX key (chave PIX) is a piece of identifying information your recipient registers with their Brazilian bank or payment app, which routes incoming PIX payments to that account. Every Brazilian bank or fintech (Itaú, Bradesco, Banco do Brasil, Nubank, Inter, C6, PicPay, etc.) lets users register up to five PIX keys. The four key types:
- CPF — the Brazilian individual taxpayer ID. Most universal; almost every adult has one
- Phone number — Brazilian mobile number with country code +55
- Email — any email address registered to the recipient at their bank
- Random key (chave aleatória) — a 32-character UUID generated by the bank app, used to avoid disclosing the CPF or phone
For inbound international transfers, providers typically ask for the recipient's CPF as the PIX key — it's the most reliable lookup. Some providers (Wise, Remitly Express) also accept phone or email PIX keys directly.
End-to-End PIX Flow from a US Sender
- Sender funds the transfer in the US: ACH from a US bank (1–2 business days), debit card (instant), or wire (same-day, USD 25–30 fee)
- Provider initiates the FX conversion — USD is converted to BRL at the provider's quoted rate, with the 0.38% IOF withheld at this stage
- Provider pushes via PIX to the recipient's registered bank using the PIX key — settlement in under 10 seconds
- Recipient sees the BRL credit in their bank app instantly, with a notification
Total time: typically under 30 minutes if ACH-funded and initiated during US business hours, under 5 minutes if debit-card-funded. PIX itself is the fastest leg by far — the bottleneck is always the US-side funding clearance.
What PIX Doesn't Do
PIX is domestic-only. Brazilians can use PIX to receive funds inside Brazil 24/7, but PIX itself doesn't move money across borders — your US-to-Brazil provider performs the FX, then uses PIX as the final-mile rail inside Brazil. There is no such thing as "international PIX" yet, though Banco Central do Brasil has signaled cross-border PIX integration plans with Argentina, Uruguay, and other Mercosul countries are in development.
The IOF Tax: 0.38% You Cannot Avoid
The single most-asked-about line item from first-time US-to-Brazil senders is the IOF tax — Imposto sobre Operações Financeiras (Tax on Financial Operations). Here's exactly what it is, why it appears, and why no provider can legally remove it.
What IOF Is
IOF is a Brazilian federal tax levied on financial operations, including foreign currency conversions. The rate for inbound personal remittances (i.e., someone in the US sending money to a person in Brazil for non-business purposes) is 0.38%, deducted automatically at the moment the receiving Brazilian bank converts the incoming USD to BRL.
Other IOF rates apply to other transactions: 1.10% on inbound investment, 6.38% on outbound credit card spending abroad, 0.38% on FX conversions for foreign business operations. The 0.38% rate has been in effect since 2013 and is governed by Brazilian Federal Decree 6,306/2007.
Where IOF Is Visible (and Where It Isn't)
IOF deduction does not appear in the US-side provider's quote screen. The provider quotes you a USD amount converted at their offered rate; the IOF is then withheld by the Brazilian receiving bank on top of the provider's quoted spread. Your recipient sees the IOF as a deduction line on their bank statement (typically labeled "IOF" or "IOF s/operação cambial").
To verify the IOF deduction:
- Check the live mid-market USD/BRL rate at /exchange-rates/usd-to-brl
- Multiply by your USD send amount to get the unmarked-up BRL value
- Subtract the 0.38% IOF (e.g., on USD 1,000 at BRL 5.0/USD = BRL 5,000 × 0.38% = BRL 19)
- Compare against what your recipient actually received — the difference is the provider's FX markup
Why You Can't Avoid IOF
IOF is a federal tax collected by the Brazilian central bank, not a provider fee. Every USD-to-BRL conversion processed through Brazilian banking infrastructure incurs it, regardless of which provider initiated the transfer. Wise, Remitly, Xoom, Western Union, US bank wires — all incur IOF on the BRL side because all use Brazilian banks for the final settlement.
Some providers advertise "no Brazil tax" or "we cover IOF" — what they actually do is pre-discount their offered rate by the IOF amount, so the BRL credited to the recipient's account matches the unmarked-up mid-market amount. This is marketing legal but not actual tax avoidance; the IOF is still collected, it's just absorbed into the provider's pricing model. It's a useful feature if you want a simpler quote-vs-receive comparison, but it doesn't make the transfer cheaper overall.
What Doesn't Trigger IOF
Cryptocurrency-based transfers (e.g., USDC stablecoin → onramp at a Brazilian crypto exchange → off-ramp to BRL) technically don't trigger IOF on the conversion leg because the off-ramp uses a separate regulatory framework. But Brazilian crypto exchanges (Mercado Bitcoin, Foxbit, Bitso) charge 1–3% in spread plus crypto network fees, so the practical cost to the recipient is similar to a Wise transfer with IOF. Crypto routing is also more complex and less reliable for the average non-technical recipient — not recommended for routine remittances.
Brazilian Banks and What Your Recipient Should Know
Knowing which Brazilian bank your recipient holds an account with shapes your provider choice. The five major incumbents handle most retail accounts; three large neobanks have grown rapidly since 2018 and now hold a substantial share, especially among younger Brazilians.
Major Incumbent Banks
- Itaú Unibanco — Brazil's largest private bank by assets. SWIFT: ITAUBRSP. Strong PIX integration, accepts all PIX key types
- Bradesco — Second-largest private bank. SWIFT: BBDEBRSP. Extensive branch network across all states
- Banco do Brasil — State-owned, largest physical branch network. SWIFT: BRASBRRJBSA. Common cash pickup partner for Western Union/MoneyGram
- Caixa Econômica Federal — State-owned, social-program disbursements. SWIFT: CEFXBRSP. Often used by lower-income recipients
- Santander Brasil — Spanish-owned subsidiary. SWIFT: BSCHBRSP. Common for Brazilian-Spanish dual citizens
Neobanks and Fintechs
- Nubank — 90+ million customers across Brazil/Mexico/Colombia. SWIFT: NUBKBRSP. Free PIX, popular with younger users. Receives international transfers seamlessly via PIX
- Banco Inter — All-digital bank, ~30 million customers. Strong with white-collar professionals and small businesses
- Banco Original / C6 Bank / PicPay — Smaller neobanks/fintechs, all PIX-enabled
Which Banks Charge the Recipient on Inbound Transfers
Most Brazilian banks do not charge the recipient an inbound-transfer fee for PIX-based receipts (PIX is free for end users by central bank mandate). Older TED-based receipts may incur a small handling fee at some banks (BRL 0–10), but this is rare in 2026 since PIX has displaced TED for inbound routes. The 0.38% IOF still applies regardless. SWIFT-based receipts (e.g., a US bank wire) typically incur a BRL 30–80 receiving-bank fee plus correspondent banking lifting fees of USD 10–30 — another reason to use specialist providers (Wise, Remitly) over US bank wires for any Brazil-bound transfer.
The Brazilian Diaspora in the US: Why This Corridor Looks Different
Understanding the demographic shape of the US-Brazil corridor explains why some providers have stronger Portuguese-language support than others, and why certain regional cash-pickup partnerships matter.
Where Brazilians in the US Live
- Florida — Roughly 400,000 Brazilians, concentrated in Miami-Dade, Broward (Pompano Beach, Deerfield Beach), Palm Beach (Boca Raton), and Orlando. Largest community by population
- Massachusetts — Approximately 350,000, with the Boston MetroWest area (Framingham, Marlborough, Hudson) and the South Coast (Brockton, Fall River) as the densest pockets. Older, more established community
- New York / New Jersey — 250,000+ across Newark NJ (Ironbound neighborhood), Long Branch, and parts of Queens NYC
- Connecticut — 100,000+ in Danbury, Bridgeport, Stamford
- California — 80,000+ in Los Angeles and the Bay Area, more recent and tech/professional-skewed
- Georgia, Texas — Smaller but growing communities (Atlanta, Houston)
What This Means for Your Provider Choice
If you're in Florida or Massachusetts and prefer in-person customer support, Western Union and MoneyGram have the densest physical agent networks in Brazilian-American neighborhoods. If you're in any of the major Brazilian-American hubs and want digital-first, Wise and Remitly both have full Portuguese-language apps and customer service. Boss Money's Latin-America specialty makes it particularly strong with Brazilian senders who want regional expertise — they staff Portuguese support 24/7.
Common Sender Profiles and Best Provider Match
- Construction worker in Pompano Beach sending USD 200 weekly to a parent in Belo Horizonte: Remitly Express (low fee on small amounts, frequent promos, instant PIX delivery)
- Tech professional in San Francisco sending USD 2,000 monthly for parents' apartment in São Paulo: Wise (best total cost on amounts above USD 1,000, mid-market FX, transparent fee)
- Recent immigrant in Framingham without a US bank account, sending USD 400: Boss Money or Western Union (both accept cash funding at retail agents, deliver via PIX or cash pickup)
- Brazilian-American business owner in Newark paying a freelancer in Florianópolis: Wise Business or OFX for amounts above USD 5,000 (proper invoice documentation, business account features)
- Parents in Boca Raton paying their daughter's monthly rent in Rio: Wise (set up auto-conversion, monthly recurring transfer, lock favorable rate)
Common Mistakes That Cost First-Time Senders Money
Five recurring errors on the USD-to-BRL corridor:
1. Comparing Headline Fees Instead of Total BRL Received
Xoom advertises "USD 0 fee" but charges 1.5–3% FX markup; Wise charges USD 5–8 fee but uses the mid-market rate. On USD 1,000, Wise delivers approximately BRL 15–30 more than Xoom even though Wise's "fee" is higher. Always compare what your recipient actually receives, not the headline fee. The live USD/BRL comparison tool shows the real BRL each provider would deliver right now.
2. Ignoring the IOF Surprise
First-time senders frequently message us asking "why did my recipient receive less BRL than the provider quoted?" The answer is almost always the 0.38% IOF — automatically deducted by the Brazilian receiving bank, not visible in the provider's quote screen. It's small (BRL 19 on USD 1,000) but the surprise erodes trust. Tell your recipient up front: the BRL hitting their account will be ~0.38% less than the provider's quoted FX × USD amount.
3. Using a US Bank Wire for Routine Remittances
The single biggest cost mistake. Chase, BofA, and Wells Fargo charge USD 40–50 per wire plus 3–5% FX markup — USD 70–90 total on USD 1,000 vs USD 5–8 with Wise. Over 12 monthly transfers that's USD 750–1,000 a year. There is essentially no scenario where a US bank wire to Brazil under USD 50,000 makes sense over a specialist.
4. Sending TED-Routed When PIX Is Available
Some providers default to TED (Brazilian electronic transfer, 1–2 day delivery) instead of PIX (instant) — especially older or non-specialist providers. Always check the delivery method before confirming; if your provider only offers TED, switch providers. Wise, Remitly, Xoom, Boss Money, and Western Union all support PIX in 2026; if yours doesn't, it's outdated.
5. Wrong PIX Key Format
If you enter the recipient's CPF as a PIX key, format it correctly: 11 digits, no dots or dashes (123.456.789-00 should be entered as 12345678900). For phone-number PIX keys, include the +55 country code. For email keys, double-check there are no typos. Wrong PIX keys typically fail with a "key not found" error and the funds are returned, but the FX may have been done at one rate and the refund happens at a different (worse) rate — costing you BRL 20–80 on a USD 1,000 transfer.
Sources & Methodology
Quote data is collected from each provider's public quote API or pricing widget every 6 hours. Mid-market USD/BRL reference rates from Banco Central do Brasil PTAX feed and exchangerate.host. PIX system documentation from Banco Central do Brasil's PIX information portal. IOF tax rate per Brazilian Federal Decree 6,306/2007 and current Receita Federal guidance. Brazilian-American population figures from Ministério das Relações Exteriores (Brazilian Foreign Ministry) consular registration data and US Census American Community Survey ancestry tabulations. Remittance flow figures from KNOMAD/World Bank and Banco Central do Brasil balance-of-payments data. Compare live USD to BRL rates →
