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Coinwy > Blog > News > Brazil Bans Crypto in Regulated Cross-Border Payments
News

Brazil Bans Crypto in Regulated Cross-Border Payments

Thiago Alvarez
Last updated: May 1, 2026 12:19 pm
Thiago Alvarez
Published: May 1, 2026
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Brazil’s central bank has issued new foreign exchange rules that prohibit the use of cryptocurrencies in regulated cross-border payment channels, drawing a clear line between supervised payment infrastructure and digital asset activity.

Contents
What Brazil’s New FX Rules Change for Crypto PaymentsWho Is Affected by the Regulated Cross-Border Payments BanWhy the Rule Matters for Brazil’s Crypto and Payments Landscape

The restriction is part of Resolution BCB No. 561, which updates the regulatory framework governing foreign exchange operations in Brazil. The rule targets the use of crypto assets within payment flows that fall under the central bank’s supervisory authority.

What Brazil’s New FX Rules Change for Crypto Payments

The policy does not amount to a blanket ban on cryptocurrency ownership or trading in Brazil. It specifically bars the use of crypto within regulated cross-border payment rails, the channels supervised by the Banco Central do Brasil for international money transfers and settlement.

Brazilian residents can still buy, hold, and trade crypto on exchanges. What changes is that regulated payment intermediaries, such as banks and licensed payment institutions, cannot use cryptocurrencies as part of the foreign exchange transaction process.

The rule aligns crypto treatment with the central bank’s broader foreign exchange framework, which has historically required that cross-border settlements flow through authorized financial channels using recognized currencies. Previous FX regulations, including Resolution BCB No. 521, established the supervisory baseline that the new rule extends.

Who Is Affected by the Regulated Cross-Border Payments Ban

The primary impact falls on regulated financial institutions and licensed payment providers operating cross-border services in Brazil. Banks, remittance companies, and payment institutions that process international transfers under central bank supervision must now ensure that crypto assets are excluded from those flows.

Crypto exchanges and peer-to-peer platforms operating outside the regulated FX framework are not directly targeted by this specific rule. However, any firm that bridges crypto and regulated cross-border payments will need to reassess its compliance structure.

For users, the practical effect is that crypto cannot serve as a settlement layer within supervised remittance or international payment products. Individuals sending money abroad through a regulated provider will not be able to route those transfers through crypto rails.

Why the Rule Matters for Brazil’s Crypto and Payments Landscape

Cross-border payments represent one of the most cited real-world use cases for cryptocurrency, particularly in Latin America where remittance volumes are significant. By excluding crypto from regulated payment channels, Brazil’s central bank is signaling that digital assets will not be treated as equivalent to traditional currencies in supervised financial infrastructure.

The move creates compliance pressure for fintech firms that had been exploring crypto-based cross-border settlement products. Companies serving Brazilian users with international transfer services will need to ensure their product architecture separates any crypto functionality from regulated FX operations.

Brazil’s approach echoes a broader global pattern. The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority recently issued rules for tokenized funds, while Japan’s exchange group is evaluating crypto ETF structures for a potential 2027 launch. Even at the protocol level, projects like Tezos are refining their governance through upgrade proposals, underscoring how both regulators and blockchain networks are working to define clearer operational boundaries.

For firms operating in Brazil’s payments sector, the immediate next step is reviewing whether any existing cross-border product touches crypto in a way that now falls under the prohibition. The rule is narrowly scoped to regulated FX channels, but its regulatory signal extends further: crypto and supervised payment infrastructure will remain separate under the current framework.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.

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ByThiago Alvarez
Thiago Alvarez is a crypto and fintech analyst at Coinwy, covering blockchain payments, DeFi protocols, and digital asset regulation. With a background in financial technology and compliance analysis, Thiago focuses on evaluating the operational viability and regulatory positioning of emerging crypto projects. His work examines token economics, cross-border payment infrastructure, and institutional adoption trends across global markets.
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