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    MarketForces Africa » Cryptocurrency » Brazil Bans Stablecoins From International Money Transfers

    Brazil Bans Stablecoins From International Money Transfers

    Olu AnisereBy Olu AnisereMay 5, 2026 Cryptocurrency No Comments3 Mins Read
    Brazil Bans Stablecoins From International Money Transfers
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    Brazil Bans Stablecoins From International Money Transfers

    Brazil has made one of the boldest crypto moves in Latin American history. The country’s central bank has banned payment companies from using stablecoins and other cryptocurrencies to move money across international borders, and the rule hits one of the world’s fastest-growing crypto markets right where it hurts most.

    The decision came through Resolution 561, published on April 30. Starting October 1 this year, any company operating inside Brazil’s regulated electronic foreign exchange system, known as eFX , will no longer be allowed to use digital currencies to settle payments with overseas partners. Instead, all cross-border transactions must go through traditional banking channels or official foreign currency accounts. Companies that are not yet authorised have until May 31, 2027 to get in line.

    The impact is enormous. Brazil’s crypto market processes between six and eight billion dollars every single month, and stablecoins like USDT and USDC make up roughly 90 percent of that volume. Around 25 million Brazilians own or use cryptocurrency in some form, and the country ranked fifth in the world for crypto adoption in 2025. These numbers make the ban all the more striking.

    The companies feeling the sharpest pain are the fintechs that built their entire business model around stablecoin transfers. Companies like Wise, Nomad, and Braza Bank have used stablecoin networks to move customer money quickly and cheaply across borders. Nomad, for example, relied on Ripple’s blockchain to shift funds between Brazil and the United States. Braza Bank had even created its own stablecoin tied to the Brazilian real on the XRP network. Both will now have to rebuild their payment systems from scratch.

    Brazil’s central bank made clear that the ban is about control, not fear of crypto itself. Its concerns centre on money laundering, tax evasion, and the erosion of national monetary authority. Regulators want all cross-border money flows to pass through systems they can monitor and regulate directly.

    Crucially, the ban does not touch personal crypto ownership. Brazilians can still freely buy, sell, hold, and trade Bitcoin, Ethereum, stablecoins, and any other digital asset through licensed platforms. What changes is behind the scenes; the payment rails that companies use to move money internationally can no longer run on crypto.

    The new rules also come with stricter requirements across the board, tighter customer identity checks, mandatory monthly reports, and data records kept for up to ten years.

    Brazil is not turning its back on crypto. It is simply making clear that crypto must play by the same rules as everything else. #Brazil Bans Stablecoins From International Money Transfers#

    XRP Climbs as Bitcoin Rally, Target Price Set at $1.65

    BRAZIL Stablecoins
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    Olu Anisere
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    Olu Anisere is a financial and economic journalist at MarketForces Africa, specialising in African macroeconomic policy, international finance, energy markets, and continental development.He covers major multilateral institutions, including the International Monetary Fund (IMF), World Bank, and the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA), providing readers with frontline reporting on policies shaping Africa's economic trajectory.Olu has reported extensively on Nigeria's fiscal and monetary policy landscape, including CBN interest rate decisions, Nigeria's bond market, FX inflows, and the country's engagement with global financial institutions.His coverage spans IMF and World Bank Spring and Annual Meetings, African Ministers of Finance conferences, and high-level economic forums where Africa's development agenda is set.His reporting captures perspectives from Africa's most influential economic voices, including Tony Elumelu, senior IMF officials, and CBN leadership, bringing institutional insight and policy depth to MarketForces Africa's readers.Olu also covers Inside Africa — tracking economic, investment, and development stories from across the continent. Olu Anisere is based in Lagos, Nigeria.

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