Home Money & Costs Are US Dollars Accepted in Brazil? (2026)
Money & Costs Updated April 2026 ⏱ 3 min read

Are US Dollars Accepted in Brazil? (2026)

US dollars are not widely accepted in Brazil. A handful of 5★ hotels, dive operators in Fernando de Noronha, and casas de câmbio (exchange houses) take them — often at mediocre rates. Everywhere else wants reais. The cleanest 2026 move: arrive with $100 in small bills for emergencies, use a Wise card for everything, and pull reais from ATMs as needed.

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Unlike Argentina where the "blue dollar" has a cult economy, Brazil has a normal monetary system and a stable currency, and US dollars are a niche tool for tourists. Here is what works in 2026.

Short Answer

  • Daily spending: dollars not accepted. Use reais or a card.
  • Some luxury hotels: accept dollars but at poor rates.
  • Fernando de Noronha dive shops: sometimes quote USD.
  • Casas de câmbio: will exchange your dollars at ~5–10% spread.
  • Best move: Wise card for cards, ATM for cash, small dollar reserve for emergencies.
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Where Dollars Actually Work

  • 5★ international hotels in Rio / São Paulo: Copacabana Palace, Fasano, Belmond, Fairmont all accept USD at checkout. Rate ~5% below mid-market.
  • Fernando de Noronha boat + dive operators: many quote in USD to match international pricing. Same tours are cheaper in reais.
  • Upscale tour operators (Pantanal lodges, Amazon river cruises): quote in USD for bookings.
  • Casas de câmbio (exchange houses): take your dollars and hand back reais.
  • Duty-free shops at GIG, GRU: accept dollars as well as reais.
  • Everywhere else — no. Restaurants, Uber, supermarkets, pharmacies, beach kiosks: reais only.

The Rates You'll Actually Get

MethodSpread vs Mid-MarketNotes
Wise debit card~0.4%Best overall. Mid-market rate, tiny fee
Schwab debit card~0%Fee refunded; great for ATMs
Major casa de câmbio (airport, mall)5–8%Visible displayed rate
Small kerbside câmbio (Copacabana)6–12%Avoid for large amounts
Hotel exchange desk7–12%Convenience tax
Hotel billing in USD5–8%"DCC" — always say "bill in reais"
Brazilian bank (Itaú, Bradesco)4–6%Takes 30+ min of queueing

ATM vs Exchange — ATM Wins

In 2026 the cleanest way to get reais is to walk up to any Banco do Brasil, Bradesco or Santander ATM, insert a Wise or Schwab debit card, and withdraw R$ 500–1,500. You get the interbank rate with no spread. The ATM itself will charge R$ 15–30 per withdrawal (some ATMs charge nothing). Wise refunds some fees; Schwab refunds all.

  • Banco do Brasil ATM: R$ 15–25 fee, R$ 1,500 max per transaction.
  • Bradesco ATM: R$ 20–30 fee, accepts foreign cards.
  • Santander ATM: R$ 15–22 fee, widely tourist-friendly.
  • 24-hour convenience-store ATMs (Banco24Horas): R$ 18–25 fee.
  • Always decline DCC: say NO when the ATM asks "charge in USD?" — always choose reais.
⚠️ Skip airport ATMs if you can wait. Airport ATMs often charge R$ 30–40/withdrawal and may have low per-transaction limits. The branch ATMs in Copacabana, Leblon, Ipanema and Zona Sul are cheaper.

Wise Card — The Modern Default

If you're reading this before booking, open a Wise account now. The card gives you mid-market FX on every card payment, works at every Brazilian contactless terminal (including Uber, supermarkets, beach kiosks that take cards), and can dispense reais at ATMs at the interbank rate. Schwab's debit card is the other standout — refunds all ATM fees worldwide.

  • Wise: mid-market rate, R$ 500/month free ATM withdrawals, 0.4% fee beyond.
  • Schwab Bank debit: full ATM fee refund, mid-market rate.
  • Revolut: similar to Wise; works but Pix integration is weaker than Wise's.
  • US credit card (Chase Sapphire / Venture): no FX fee, works everywhere but doesn't dispense cash at good rates.

The Small-Bill Emergency Reserve

Bring $100–200 in clean, small US bills ($20s and $10s) as a backup. Reason: if your card stops working (cloning fraud, ATM network outage, frozen by your bank), you can walk into any casa de câmbio and convert dollars to reais in five minutes. Even at a poor 8% spread, it beats being stuck.

  • Clean and crisp only: casas de câmbio reject torn, marked or pre-2006 bills.
  • Small denominations: $10 and $20 bills exchange easier than $100s.
  • Store separately from primary cards: hotel safe or money belt.
  • Do not flash cash when handling exchange in Copacabana kerbside kiosks.
💡 Got leftover reais at the end of your trip? Spend them on a duty-free purchase at GIG/GRU — you'll get better value than exchanging back. Most duty-free shops accept small R$ amounts blended with card payment.
People also ask
Can I use Euros in Brazil?+
Even less than dollars — casas de câmbio take them at similar spreads. For daily use, no.
Are older US $100 bills (pre-2013) accepted in Brazil?+
Some places refuse them because Brazilian banks scan for the latest security features. Bring post-2013 bills only.
Do Uber drivers accept dollars?+
No. Card on the app or reais in cash only.
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Frequently Asked Questions

Can I pay with US dollars in Brazil?

Only at some upper-tier hotels, dive shops on Fernando de Noronha, and official casas de câmbio. Restaurants, supermarkets, taxis and Uber all require reais or a card.

Should I bring US dollars to Brazil?

Bring a small reserve ($100–200 in clean, small bills) for emergency cash exchange. Don't rely on them for daily spending — the rate you'll get is often 5–10% below mid-market.

Where can I exchange dollars in Brazil?

Casas de câmbio at airports, malls (Banco da República, Cotação, Travelex), and along Avenida Atlântica in Copacabana. Always compare rates across two before committing.

Is it cheaper to use an ATM or exchange dollars in Brazil?

ATM almost always wins. Wise or Schwab debit cards give the mid-market rate with zero spread; exchange houses typically add 5–10%.

Do hotels in Rio accept US dollars?

Some upper-end ones do (Copacabana Palace, Fasano) but the rate is poor. Always ask to be billed in reais and pay with a card for the best rate.

Are US dollars useful in Fernando de Noronha?

Some dive shops and boat operators there quote in USD for international guests. Even so, reais are cheaper at checkout.

Can I tip in US dollars in Brazil?

Avoid it. Small bills are hard to exchange for Brazilians. Tip in reais.

Do Brazilian banks exchange dollars?

Some but with worse rates and longer queues than dedicated casas de câmbio. Skip.