R$50-200 per “lauda” of sworn translation - and no, you can’t do it yourself even if you speak perfect Portuguese. Brazil is one of the only countries in the world where translating foreign documents is the exclusive job of a state-licensed sworn translator (tradutor juramentado) who passed a government exam administered by the state’s Commercial Registry (Junta Comercial). A translation done outside Brazil simply isn’t recognized here. If you’re Ukrainian and planning to get a permanent VIPER visa - investment, family, retirement, or humanitarian - this guide covers exactly what to translate, how the system works, and what it’ll realistically cost you.
Brazil isn’t the most obvious destination for Ukrainians, but that’s been changing. Visa-free entry for 90 days, a humanitarian visa program running since 2022, warm climate, and a relatively affordable cost of living compared to Western Europe - the reasons add up. But the bureaucracy here is its own thing, and without preparation you can easily get stuck for months.
What VIPER Visa Types Exist for Ukrainians¶
VIPER stands for “VIsa PERmanente” - it’s the umbrella term for all Brazilian permanent visa categories. Officially they also carry codes like VITEM IX (investment), VITEM XI (family reunion), and others. Here’s what actually applies to Ukrainians:
| Visa type | Who it’s for | Key requirement | Path to citizenship |
|---|---|---|---|
| Investment (VITEM IX) | Entrepreneurs, investors | R$500,000 investment or R$150,000 + 10 jobs created | 4 years |
| Real Estate | Property buyers | R$1,000,000 (South/Southeast) or R$700,000 (North/Northeast) | 4 years |
| Family Reunion (VITEM XI) | Spouses/children of Brazilian citizens | Marriage certificate + financial support | 4 years (after 2 years temporary) |
| Retirement | Retirees | Pension of R$6,000/month transferable to Brazil | 4 years |
| Humanitarian (VITEM III) | Ukrainians affected by war | Refugee status or humanitarian grounds | 4 years (after 2 years temporary) |
According to the Brazilian Ministry of Foreign Affairs portal, VIPER can be issued to foreigners who intend to reside in Brazil for more than 2 years and fall under one of these categories.
One important note on the investment visa: R$500,000 is the baseline amount. But if you’re investing in technology or research and creating at least 10 jobs for Brazilian nationals, the threshold drops to R$150,000. That’s actually a workable path for Ukrainian IT entrepreneurs.
And if you’re looking at the real estate option - it has to be urban property (urbana). Agricultural land doesn’t qualify for VIPER. Buying an apartment in São Paulo for R$1,000,000 works. A farm in Bahia doesn’t.
The Humanitarian Visa: What Changed in 2026¶
Since March 2022, Brazil had been offering Ukrainians a special humanitarian visa (VITEM III) that granted the right to temporary residence, work, study, and access to the healthcare system. As Fragomen reports, the program was extended multiple times, with the last extension running through December 31, 2025.
From January 1, 2026, things changed. Brazil introduced a new unified humanitarian visa framework that replaced the country-specific programs (Ukraine, Afghanistan, Haiti). Instead of country-specific tracks, there’s now a general framework - and until the first list of eligible countries is published, no new humanitarian visas are being issued.
What this means in practice:
- If you already got a humanitarian visa before December 31, 2025 - it’s still valid, and you can extend your stay and apply for permanent residency after 2 years
- If you haven’t applied yet - the humanitarian path is on hold until the new eligible countries list is published
- Alternatives: use the 90-day visa-free entry and apply for a different visa type once you’re already in Brazil
Following an initial stay of 180 days, visa holders are entitled to temporary residency for 2 years, after which they can apply for a permanent visa.
So the humanitarian visa isn’t a dead end - it’s a real path to permanent residency. But right now it’s uncertain for new applicants.
Tradução Juramentada: Brazil’s Sworn Translation System¶
Here’s where things get genuinely different from everything you know about sworn translation in Germany (beeidigter Übersetzer) or certified translation for USCIS. Brazil has a unique system that exists almost nowhere else.
Who Is a Tradutor Juramentado¶
A tradutor juramentado (full official title: tradutor público e intérprete comercial - public translator and commercial interpreter) is an individual who:
- Passed a competitive government exam (concurso público) run by the state’s Commercial Registry (Junta Comercial)
- Holds a license for a specific language pair (for example, Ukrainian-Portuguese)
- Is registered in a specific Brazilian state
- Has an official stamp and registration number
As the Brazilian Ministry of Foreign Affairs states:
A public translation, commonly known as a sworn translation, is a translation made by a public translator and is the only officially recognized translation by various institutions and public bodies in Brazil.
The Critical Rule: Translation Only Happens IN Brazil¶
This is the key difference from most other countries. Brazil doesn’t recognize sworn translations done abroad. Even if you got a notarized translation in Ukraine, apostilled and certified - it’s invalid in Brazil. You need a translation specifically by a Brazilian tradutor juramentado.
| What’s recognized | What’s NOT recognized |
|---|---|
| Translation by a Brazilian tradutor juramentado | Translation done outside Brazil |
| Translator registered with Junta Comercial | Translation agency without Brazilian license |
| Translation with official stamp and registration number | “Certified” translation without Brazilian license |
What Tradução Juramentada Costs¶
Pricing is calculated per “lauda” - a unit of 1,000 characters without spaces.
| Language pair | Price per lauda (R$) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| English - Portuguese | R$90-120 | Most common pair, most translators |
| Ukrainian - Portuguese | R$150-250 | Rare pair, very few translators |
| Russian - Portuguese | R$120-180 | More specialists than Ukrainian |
| German - Portuguese | R$130-200 | Mid-range pricing |
A birth certificate is typically 2-3 laudas, so R$180-750 depending on the language pair. A 10-page diploma supplement from Ukrainian can run R$1,500-3,750.
Practical tip: since Ukrainian-Portuguese translators in Brazil are genuinely rare, there’s a working alternative. Get a preliminary translation into English first (tools like ChatsControl can help with a quick draft), then order tradução juramentada from English to Portuguese. English-Portuguese translators are much more common and charge less. But confirm this approach with your lawyer or the Federal Police (Polícia Federal) first - acceptability can depend on your specific case.
Where to Find a Tradutor Juramentado¶
Each state has its own registry through the Junta Comercial. The main databases:
- São Paulo: JUCESP - the largest pool of translators in Brazil
- Rio de Janeiro: JUCERJA
- Brasília: through the Junta Comercial do Distrito Federal
One expat on a forum put it plainly:
As an “ex-pat” you will eventually need a “Sworn Translator” for documents. They are licensed and tested by the government. Find one before you need one if possible since most good ones are busy.
That’s real advice. Good translators - especially for rare language pairs - get booked out quickly. Start looking before you actually need them.
Full Document Checklist for a Permanent VIPER Visa¶
The exact document package depends on which visa type you’re applying for, but there’s a core set that everyone needs.
Documents Required for All VIPER Types¶
| Document | Apostille? | Tradução juramentada? | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| International passport | No | No | Valid min. 6 months, 2 blank pages |
| Birth certificate | Yes | Yes | Apostille in Ukraine BEFORE leaving |
| Police clearance certificate | Yes | Yes | From every country where you lived 12+ months |
| Photos 3x4 cm | No | No | Brazilian standards |
| Medical certificate | Depends | Yes | Some consulates require it |
| Application form (formulário) | No | No | Filled in Portuguese, online |
Additional Documents for Investment Visa¶
| Document | Apostille? | Tradução juramentada? |
|---|---|---|
| Business plan | No | Yes (if not in Portuguese) |
| Proof of investment (statements, contracts) | Yes | Yes |
| Company registration extract (if you own a business) | Yes | Yes |
| Articles of incorporation (Contrato Social) | No | No (if Brazilian company) |
Additional Documents for Family Reunion Visa¶
| Document | Apostille? | Tradução juramentada? |
|---|---|---|
| Marriage certificate | Yes | Yes |
| Brazilian marriage certificate (Certidão de Casamento) | No | No (already in Portuguese) |
| Sponsor’s income proof | Depends | Yes |
| Children’s birth certificates | Yes | Yes |
Important: if you got married in Ukraine, you’ll also need a Brazilian marriage certificate issued either by a Cartório or the Brazilian consulate. A marriage registered by proxy (procuração) does NOT qualify for a family reunion visa - this is explicitly stated in the Brazilian MFA requirements. Both parties need to be physically present at registration.
Additional Documents for Retirement Visa¶
| Document | Apostille? | Tradução juramentada? |
|---|---|---|
| Pension certificate (from Pension Fund) | Yes | Yes |
| Proof of regular transfers | No | Yes |
| Bank statements (3-6 months) | No | Yes |
According to Resolução Normativa no 45, the minimum pension for a permanent visa is R$6,000 per month. For each dependent, add R$2,000 to the minimum. These funds need to be regularly transferred to a Brazilian bank account.
Apostille and Legalization: Ukraine to Brazil¶
Good news on this front. Both Ukraine and Brazil are members of the 1961 Hague Convention. Brazil joined in 2016. This means instead of the complex consular legalization chain, you only need an apostille.
Where to Get an Apostille in Ukraine¶
| Document type | Who issues apostille | Approximate cost |
|---|---|---|
| Birth, marriage, death certificates | Ministry of Justice | 300-500 UAH |
| Diploma, school certificate | Ministry of Education and Science | 300-500 UAH |
| Police clearance certificate | Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine | 300-500 UAH |
| Court decisions | Ministry of Justice | 300-500 UAH |
For a more detailed breakdown of the apostille process in Ukraine, there’s a full separate guide: Apostille in Ukraine: what it is, where to get it, how much it costs.
The Order Matters: Apostille First, Then Translation¶
This is critical - the sequence has to be right:
- Get your document in Ukraine (certificate, clearance, diploma)
- Get the apostille stamped ON THE ORIGINAL in Ukraine
- Travel to Brazil (or send your documents)
- Order tradução juramentada in Brazil
Not the other way around. The sworn translator translates the document TOGETHER WITH the apostille - it’s one complete package. If you get the translation done first and then apostille it afterward, you’ll have to redo the translation. This mistake costs real money and real time.
What the Whole Process Actually Costs¶
Let’s do the math with real numbers.
Translation Costs (Tradução Juramentada)¶
| Document | Approximate laudas | Cost (R$) from English | Cost (R$) from Ukrainian |
|---|---|---|---|
| Birth certificate | 2-3 | R$180-360 | R$300-750 |
| Marriage certificate | 2-3 | R$180-360 | R$300-750 |
| Police clearance certificate | 1-2 | R$90-240 | R$150-500 |
| Diploma (without supplement) | 2-3 | R$180-360 | R$300-750 |
| Diploma supplement (10 pages) | 10-15 | R$900-1,800 | R$1,500-3,750 |
| Bank statements | 3-5 | R$270-600 | R$450-1,250 |
A typical translation package (birth certificate + police clearance + 1-2 financial documents) from English runs R$700-1,500. From Ukrainian - R$1,200-3,000.
Full Cost Picture¶
| Cost item | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Apostille in Ukraine | 1,000-2,000 UAH (~R$50-100) | 3-5 documents |
| Flight Kyiv to São Paulo | R$3,000-8,000 | With layovers |
| Tradução juramentada | R$700-3,000 | Depends on language pair and number of docs |
| CPF (tax registration number) | Free | Obtained at Receita Federal |
| RNM card registration (Polícia Federal) | R$250-350 | Mandatory within 90 days |
| Immigration lawyer (optional) | R$3,000-10,000 | Recommended for complex cases |
For an investment visa, add the actual investment (R$500,000+). For the retirement visa, factor in proof of transferring R$6,000/month.
If you want to compare this against other destinations, check the guides on document translation for Canadian Express Entry or the Green Card document list for USCIS - the translation requirements are genuinely different in each country.
Step-by-Step Timeline¶
Planning a move? Here’s a realistic timeline.
3-4 Months Before You Leave (in Ukraine)¶
- Collect all original documents: certificates, clearances, diplomas
- Order your police clearance certificate - it has a limited validity period, usually 3-6 months
- Get apostille stamps on all documents that need them, before you leave
- Make high-quality color scans of everything (originals and apostilled versions)
- Optionally: get a preliminary English translation of your documents from ChatsControl to reduce translation costs in Brazil
1-2 Months Before You Leave¶
- Find a tradutor juramentado in the city you’re moving to (São Paulo, Rio, Brasília)
- Agree on timelines and cost upfront
- Submit your visa application at the Brazilian consulate (if applying from abroad)
- Get travel health insurance
First 90 Days in Brazil¶
- Get your CPF (Cadastro de Pessoa Física - your Brazilian tax ID number, needed for absolutely everything)
- Order tradução juramentada for all your documents
- Register with the Polícia Federal to get your RNM card (Registro Nacional Migratório - the National Migration Registry card)
- Open a bank account (you’ll need CPF + passport + proof of address)
You cannot directly apply for an RNM card in Brazil, as it is not a standalone benefit. The RNM card is a consequence of first securing an immigration benefit or residency authorization.
So the sequence is: visa first, then registration, then RNM card. Not the other way around.
After Getting Your RNM Card¶
- Keep all originals and translations - you’ll need them for renewals
- After 2 years (for temporary visa holders) - apply for permanent residency
- After 4 years of permanent residency - you can apply for Brazilian citizenship
Common Mistakes That Cost You Time and Money¶
Based on expat forums and immigration law resources, here’s what goes wrong most often.
Getting a translation done outside Brazil. This is the most common mistake by far. You get a “certified” translation done in Ukraine or Germany - and in Brazil it’s simply not recognized. Money wasted, time lost, start over.
Forgetting the apostille. You arrive in Brazil with your originals but without apostilles. Now you either have to go back to Ukraine or organize everything remotely through a trusted person - that’s months of added waiting.
Wrong sequence. You get the translation done first, then apostille it. The tradutor juramentado translates the document TOGETHER with the apostille. They’re a single package. You’ll have to redo the translation.
Expired police clearance. Validity periods differ by country. A Ukrainian Ministry of Internal Affairs clearance is usually valid for 3-6 months. If you got it 4 months before you submit your application, it might have already expired.
Marriage by proxy. If you married a Brazilian citizen through a procuração (power of attorney, allowing one party to be absent), the family reunion visa doesn’t work. Both parties need to be physically present at the marriage registration.
Missing the 90-day RNM deadline. After arriving in Brazil, you have 90 days to register. Miss it and you’re looking at fines and problems with your legal status.
One practical tip: if you can budget for it, hire a Brazilian immigration lawyer (advogado de imigração). R$3,000-10,000 for full-process support is an investment that saves you far more in mistakes and delays.
How Brazil Compares to Other Destinations for Ukrainians¶
If you’re weighing your options, here’s how Brazil stacks up against more common Ukrainian immigration destinations.
| Feature | Brazil | Canada | Germany |
|---|---|---|---|
| Translation system | Tradução juramentada (sworn) | IRCC-certified translator | Beeidigter Übersetzer (sworn) |
| Translation done in host country? | Yes, mandatory | No, can be done abroad | Yes, preferred |
| Visa-free days for Ukrainians | 90 | 0 (CUAET expired 2024) | N/A (TPS) |
| Path to citizenship | 4 years permanent residency | 3 years permanent residency | 8 years (5 with integration) |
| Translation cost (Ukrainian docs) | R$150-250 per lauda | CAD $20-40/page | EUR €30-60/page |
| Apostille recognized | Yes (Hague member since 2016) | Yes (Hague member) | Yes (Hague member) |
| Language required | Portuguese | English or French | German |
Brazil’s unique characteristic is the mandatory in-country sworn translation. You can’t show up with translations from home - that’s not how it works here. The upside is that Brazil’s 1961 Hague Convention membership means your Ukrainian apostilles are fully recognized, which saves you from the much more complex consular legalization process.
FAQ¶
Do I need tradução juramentada for bank statements?¶
Yes, if you’re submitting them as proof of financial capacity for the visa. Any foreign document used in official procedures in Brazil needs to be translated by a tradutor juramentado. The only exception is if the document already comes with an official English or Portuguese version issued by the bank itself.
Can I enter Brazil without a visa and then apply for VIPER?¶
Yes. Ukrainians get 90 visa-free days. You can enter as a tourist and apply for residency authorization already in Brazil through the Polícia Federal - for example, based on family ties or as an investor. This is one of the most common routes.
How long does tradução juramentada take for one document?¶
Usually 3-7 business days for simple documents (birth certificate, police clearance). For longer documents (diploma supplement, business plan) - up to 2-3 weeks. During peak seasons (beginning of the academic year, end of the financial year) timelines can stretch.
Does Brazil recognize Ukrainian apostilles?¶
Yes. Both countries are members of the 1961 Hague Convention. Ukraine joined in 2003, Brazil in 2016. An apostille stamped by the appropriate Ukrainian authority (Ministry of Education, Ministry of Justice, Ministry of Foreign Affairs) is fully recognized in Brazil with no additional consular legalization needed.
What if there’s no Ukrainian-Portuguese tradutor juramentado available?¶
This is a real problem - Ukrainian-Portuguese sworn translators in Brazil are genuinely scarce. Your options: 1) Find a Russian-Portuguese translator - there are more of them, and many work with Ukrainian documents. 2) Get an official English translation of your documents in Ukraine, then order tradução juramentada from English to Portuguese in Brazil - cheaper and faster. 3) Find a translator in a different state - tradução juramentada is valid across all of Brazil regardless of which state it was issued in. If you go with option 2, ChatsControl can help you prepare a working draft in English before you hand it to the sworn translator.
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