Introduction
When a foreign owner dies leaving real estate in Brazil, the succession must produce effects compatible with Brazilian legal, tax and registry systems.
Even if there is a foreign probate proceeding, foreign will or foreign court decision, Brazilian real estate often requires probate, partition or another succession procedure capable of producing effects before the Brazilian Real Estate Registry.
The analysis may involve exclusive Brazilian jurisdiction, STJ homologation, foreign documents, apostille, consular legalization, sworn translation, ITCMD and coordination between Brazilian and foreign counsel.
Is Brazilian Probate Required?
In many cases, yes.
When a foreigner dies owning property located in Brazil, transfer to heirs normally depends on a succession procedure compatible with Brazilian law.
Until the succession is formalized and registered, heirs may face difficulties selling the property, regularizing title, updating records, using the asset as collateral, receiving sale proceeds or remitting funds abroad.
Brazilian Jurisdiction Over Brazilian Real Estate
International succession requires separating jurisdiction, applicable law and registry effects.
The Brazilian Code of Civil Procedure gives Brazilian courts exclusive jurisdiction over confirmation of private wills, probate and partition of assets located in Brazil, even if the deceased was foreign or domiciled abroad.
This means Brazilian real estate remains subject to Brazilian jurisdiction for probate and partition purposes.
Applicable Law in International Succession
Brazil’s Law of Introduction to Brazilian Law provides that succession by death generally follows the law of the deceased’s domicile.
That rule does not resolve every practical effect involving Brazilian real estate.
The Brazilian Constitution also protects succession of assets located in Brazil for the benefit of a Brazilian spouse or children when Brazilian law is more favorable.
International estates may require coordination among domicile law, asset location, heirs’ domicile, Brazilian spouse or children, foreign wills and Brazilian registry requirements.
Why Foreign Documents May Not Be Enough
Foreign succession documents may prove death, existence of a will, appointment of a representative, heirs’ identity, foreign partition or a foreign succession decision.
For use in Brazil, they often require apostille or consular legalization, sworn translation, documentary validation and assessment of compatibility with Brazilian procedures.
When a foreign document seeks direct effects over Brazilian real estate, exclusive Brazilian jurisdiction may limit its effectiveness.
STJ Homologation
Foreign decisions may require homologation by STJ to produce effects in Brazil.
However, homologation is not an automatic mechanism to transfer Brazilian real estate when Brazilian law requires probate or local registration.
Recent STJ case law has reinforced the importance of Article 23, II, of the Brazilian Code of Civil Procedure regarding Brazilian jurisdiction over probate and partition of assets located in Brazil.
Judicial or Extrajudicial Probate
Brazilian probate may be judicial or extrajudicial, depending on the circumstances.
Extrajudicial probate may be available where legal and notarial requirements are met. Judicial probate tends to be necessary in disputes, cases involving incapacity, significant documentary divergence or international complexity requiring court intervention.
Resolution CNJ No. 571/2024 expanded certain possibilities for extrajudicial probate, but international estates still require individual analysis.
Foreign Heirs and Documents
Foreign heirs may receive Brazilian real estate, subject to succession, tax, documentary and registry requirements.
Documents may include death certificate, civil certificates, identity documents, powers of attorney, wills, foreign decisions, succession documents, corporate documents, tax records and updated matricula.
Foreign documents usually require apostille or consular legalization and sworn translation into Portuguese.
Real Estate Registry Transfer
The succession transfer must be reflected in the matricula before the competent Real Estate Registry.
Until this occurs, heirs may face practical limitations on sale, collateral, patrimonial reorganization, banking transactions and future regularization.
The matricula should be reviewed from the beginning of the estate process.
ITCMD and Tax Issues
Transfer by death of Brazilian real estate may trigger ITCMD, a state inheritance and gift tax.
The analysis depends on the state’s legislation, property location, valuation, ownership structure and succession facts.
International estates may also create tax exposure abroad. Brazilian and foreign tax issues should be coordinated case by case.
Common Mistakes
Common mistakes include assuming foreign probate automatically transfers Brazilian property, ignoring exclusive Brazilian jurisdiction, trying to sell before succession regularization, failing to evaluate STJ homologation, omitting apostille or sworn translation, ignoring ITCMD and failing to review the matricula.
FAQ
Is probate in Brazil required when a foreign owner dies with Brazilian property? In many cases, yes.
Does foreign probate automatically transfer Brazilian real estate? Not necessarily.
Can foreign heirs inherit Brazilian real estate? Yes, subject to succession, tax, documentary and registry requirements.
Can heirs abroad act by power of attorney? Often, yes, if the power of attorney meets Brazilian formal requirements.
Is ITCMD relevant? Yes. Transfer by death of Brazilian real estate may trigger state ITCMD.
Conclusion
When a foreign owner dies leaving property in Brazil, succession must be coordinated with Brazilian legal, tax and registry requirements.
Foreign documents may be useful, but they usually do not automatically replace Brazilian probate, partition, Real Estate Registry regularization, ITCMD and document formalities.
SCCM Advogados advises foreign heirs and families on Brazilian probate, international succession, registry transfer, ITCMD coordination, foreign documents and estate regularization.