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Short Description: Complete guide to Brazil’s VITEM-VI Temporary Visa for Working Holiday applicants: eligibility, documents, work rights, limits, process, costs, and official sources.

Last Verified On: 2026-03-21

Visa Snapshot

Item Details
Country Brazil
Visa name Temporary Visa – Working Holiday
Visa short name VITEM-VI
Category Temporary visa
Main purpose Cultural exchange and holiday travel with limited/authorized work under bilateral working holiday arrangements
Typical applicant Young foreign nationals from countries that have a working holiday agreement with Brazil
Validity Varies by bilateral agreement and consular issuance; commonly up to 1 year where offered
Stay duration Varies by nationality/agreement; check the specific Brazilian consulate handling your nationality
Entries allowed Often multiple, but this can vary by issuance and reciprocity rules
Extension possible? Usually limited and agreement-specific; often not extendable beyond the maximum allowed under the bilateral arrangement
Work allowed? Yes, but only within the terms of the working holiday arrangement; not a standard unrestricted labor visa
Study allowed? Limited; short incidental study may be possible, but this is not primarily a student visa
Family allowed? Generally no dependent route built into working holiday status; dependents usually need their own qualifying status/visa
PR path? Possible indirectly only if the holder later qualifies under another residence route
Citizenship path? Indirect only; the visa itself is not a direct citizenship route

Brazil’s VITEM-VI Temporary Visa – Working Holiday is a temporary entry visa issued to eligible foreign nationals under bilateral Working Holiday agreements that Brazil has signed with certain countries.

It exists to promote:

  • youth mobility
  • cultural exchange
  • tourism
  • limited work to help finance travel
  • temporary people-to-people exchange between Brazil and partner countries

In Brazil’s immigration system, this is a temporary visa category granted under Brazil’s migration framework and implemented through specific bilateral arrangements. It is not a general visa open to all nationalities.

What it is legally

This route is:

  • a temporary visa
  • issued by a Brazilian embassy or consulate abroad
  • typically followed, for longer stays, by post-arrival immigration registration with the Brazilian Federal Police if required by the stay length and applicable rules

What it is not

It is not:

  • a tourist visa for general tourism only
  • a standard work visa for long-term employment
  • a digital nomad visa
  • a student visa
  • a permanent residence permit
  • an e-visa category publicly available for all nationalities

Official/administrative naming

Common naming includes:

  • VITEM-VI
  • Temporary Visa – Working Holiday
  • in Portuguese, often referred to as Visto Temporário VI – Working Holiday or similar consular wording

Because Brazil publishes visa implementation partly through laws, decrees, and consular pages, the exact public-facing name can vary slightly by post.

Warning: Availability depends on your nationality and the existence of a bilateral agreement with Brazil. If your country has no working holiday agreement with Brazil, you generally cannot use VITEM-VI for this purpose.

2. Who should apply for this visa?

Ideal applicants

This visa is best for:

  • young travelers who want to spend an extended period in Brazil
  • people seeking a holiday-first, work-secondary experience
  • applicants from a partner country
  • people who meet the age limits and financial requirements of the relevant bilateral agreement
  • those wanting temporary cultural immersion rather than permanent migration

How this visa fits different applicant types

Applicant type Suitable? Notes
Tourists Sometimes Only if eligible under a working holiday agreement and they want a longer youth-mobility stay with possible work rights
Business visitors Usually no Use the appropriate business/visitor route instead
Job seekers Limited Working holiday may allow incidental employment, but it is not a general job-seeker visa
Employees Usually no If you already have a specific Brazilian employer and long-term work plan, a work/residence route is usually more appropriate
Students Limited Not the right route for full-time degree study
Spouses/partners Usually no as dependents They usually need their own visa/status
Children/dependents No This visa is generally designed for individual young adults
Researchers No A research or academic route is usually more appropriate
Digital nomads Usually no Brazil has a separate digital nomad residence/visa framework
Founders/entrepreneurs Limited Not the right route for formal long-term business establishment
Investors No Use Brazil’s investment-based residence routes
Retirees No Not intended for retirees
Religious workers No Use the relevant temporary/residence route
Artists/athletes Usually no Performance/activity-specific authorization may be needed
Transit passengers No Not a transit route
Medical travelers No Use the relevant visitor/temporary route if available
Diplomatic/official travelers No Use diplomatic/official visas
Special category applicants Depends Only if covered by an agreement and all criteria are met

Who should not use this visa?

Do not use VITEM-VI if you are:

  • not from an eligible working holiday partner country
  • outside the age band
  • planning full-time long-term employment for one employer
  • moving with spouse/children expecting derivative status
  • enrolling in a long academic program
  • relocating permanently

You should consider instead:

  • Brazil visitor visa/visa waiver for tourism or short business
  • Brazil digital nomad route for remote foreign work
  • Brazil work/residence authorization route for employer-sponsored work
  • Brazil student visa for study
  • Brazil family reunion/residence route for joining a spouse or family member
  • Brazil investment/business route for qualifying investors or executives

3. What is this visa used for?

Permitted uses

The precise permitted uses depend on the bilateral agreement, but generally include:

  • holiday travel in Brazil
  • tourism
  • cultural exchange
  • temporary stay for youth mobility
  • taking up temporary/occasional work as allowed by the agreement
  • supporting travel expenses through lawful work
  • short incidental study or language learning, where not the primary purpose and if not prohibited by the specific agreement

Prohibited or risky uses

Usually prohibited or unsuitable:

  • permanent relocation
  • unrestricted labor migration
  • full-time long-term study as the main purpose
  • bringing dependents under the same status
  • working outside the scope of the agreement or Brazilian labor/migration rules
  • journalism without appropriate authorization if required
  • religious mission work without the proper route
  • medical treatment as the primary basis
  • transit-only travel
  • investment migration as the main purpose

Common grey areas

Remote work

Brazil has a separate digital nomad framework. Whether a Working Holiday holder can do remote work for a foreign employer is not always clearly explained on public consular pages. It may depend on:

  • the bilateral agreement wording
  • how Brazilian authorities classify the activity
  • whether the holder is mainly in Brazil under holiday/youth mobility conditions

Pro Tip: If remote work is a major part of your plan, verify in writing with the Brazilian consulate and compare with Brazil’s digital nomad route.

Internships

Internships may require separate legal treatment depending on whether they are paid, formalized, and tied to study.

Volunteering

Genuine unpaid volunteering may be acceptable in some contexts, but if it resembles productive labor replacing paid work, it can raise compliance concerns.

Marriage in Brazil

Getting married in Brazil does not automatically convert working holiday status into residence. A separate immigration process is usually needed.

4. Official visa classification and naming

Official program name

  • Temporary Visa – Working Holiday

Short name / code

  • VITEM-VI

Long name

  • Temporary Visa VI – Working Holiday

Internal streams

Brazil’s public-facing system does not always present public “streams” the way some countries do. Instead, the practical subcategories arise from:

  • the nationality-specific bilateral agreement
  • the Brazilian consular post’s implementation
  • any reciprocity conditions

Related permit names

Applicants may also encounter references to:

  • temporary visa
  • residence registration
  • Federal Police registration
  • CRNM (Carteira de Registro Nacional Migratório), if registration is required after arrival for the stay granted

Old vs current naming

Brazil’s migration system changed significantly under the Migration Law (Lei de Migração) and subsequent regulations. Older references may use legacy terminology from the prior foreigner statute or older visa systems.

Commonly confused categories

People often confuse VITEM-VI with:

  • Visitor visa (VIVIS) for tourism/business
  • Digital Nomad temporary visa/residence
  • Temporary work/residence authorization
  • Student visa
  • Family reunion residence

5. Eligibility criteria

Core eligibility principle

You generally need to be a national of a country that has a working holiday agreement with Brazil and meet the specific conditions of that bilateral arrangement.

Eligibility matrix

Requirement Typical rule Important note
Nationality Must be from an eligible partner country This is the biggest threshold issue
Passport Valid passport Usually valid through intended stay, often with blank pages
Age Usually youth age bracket Often 18–30 or 18–35 depending on agreement
Purpose Holiday/cultural exchange with ancillary work Not for standard long-term employment
Funds Must show enough money for initial support Amount varies by agreement/post
Onward/return travel Usually required Return ticket or funds to buy one
Criminal record Often required or considered Country-specific certificate rules vary
Health insurance Commonly required Must usually cover the stay period or substantial part of it
Dependents Usually not allowed Check if the agreement excludes accompanying dependents
Prior participation May be limited Some agreements allow only one participation
Good faith/intention Must genuinely fit the program Misusing it as a hidden permanent work route is risky

Nationality rules

This visa is not universal. It is available only where Brazil has entered into a bilateral youth mobility/working holiday arrangement and is actively implementing it.

Warning: Eligibility is highly nationality-specific. Some Brazilian consulates list the working holiday category only for particular nationalities.

Passport validity

Official consular practice usually requires:

  • a valid passport
  • sufficient validity beyond the intended entry/stay
  • blank visa pages where needed

Because passport validity rules can differ by post, check the exact consulate webpage.

Age

Age rules are set by the bilateral agreement. Common patterns internationally are:

  • 18 to 30 inclusive, or
  • 18 to 35 inclusive

But for Brazil, you must verify the exact rule for your nationality.

Education

A formal education threshold is not usually the core feature of working holiday programs, but some bilateral arrangements may impose minimum education or status conditions. Public information is not always consistent across posts.

Language

No broad public rule indicates a general Portuguese-language requirement for VITEM-VI. Some agreements may expect basic communication ability, but this is not commonly stated as a formal test.

Work experience

Usually not a formal requirement.

Sponsorship / invitation / job offer

Usually:

  • no job offer required
  • no employer sponsorship required
  • a host/inviter is generally not mandatory unless a post asks for accommodation or contact details

Points requirement

Not applicable for this visa.

Relationship proof

Not usually relevant unless a consulate asks for host accommodation evidence or there are name/document discrepancies.

Admission letter

Not generally required because this is not a student visa.

Business/investment thresholds

Not applicable.

Maintenance funds

Applicants are usually expected to show sufficient funds to support themselves at the start of the stay, plus onward travel capability.

Accommodation proof

This may be requested by some consulates or at the border, but it is not always a core published requirement.

Onward travel

Often one of these is required:

  • a return ticket, or
  • enough funds to buy one

Health

You may need:

  • health insurance
  • to confirm no public health risk issues
  • in some cases, additional health documentation depending on nationality or recent travel history

Character / criminal record

A police or criminal record certificate is commonly requested for temporary visas and is especially common for youth mobility routes.

Insurance

Health/travel insurance is commonly expected and may need to cover:

  • medical expenses
  • hospitalization
  • repatriation

Biometrics

Brazilian consular procedures vary. Biometrics may be collected depending on post and local procedures.

Intent requirements

This visa is intended for temporary cultural/travel stay with possible work. Applicants should be able to show they understand that:

  • the visa is temporary
  • work is incidental or within the agreement framework
  • it is not a disguised long-term work migration route

Residence outside Brazil

You normally apply from abroad through a Brazilian embassy or consulate with jurisdiction over your place of residence or nationality, though third-country applications may sometimes be accepted depending on local practice.

Local registration rules

If the stay exceeds the threshold requiring registration, the visa holder may need to register with the Polícia Federal after arrival.

Quotas/caps/ballots

Some working holiday programs globally have caps, but for Brazil this is agreement-specific and not always publicly summarized in one central official page. Check your nationality-specific consular page.

Embassy-specific rules

Very important for VITEM-VI. Posts may differ on:

  • application form process
  • required translations
  • appointment rules
  • accepted proof of funds
  • whether originals/copies are needed
  • police certificate format
  • insurance wording

Special exemptions

No general public exemptions are consistently published for all applicants.

6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers

Likely ineligibility factors

  • nationality not covered by a Brazil working holiday agreement
  • age outside the permitted range
  • expired or insufficiently valid passport
  • applying for the wrong visa class
  • inability to prove funds
  • lack of required insurance
  • prior serious immigration violations
  • criminal history where disqualifying
  • attempting to bring dependents when the route does not allow them
  • applying after the annual cap is filled, if a cap applies

Common refusal triggers

Mismatch between stated purpose and documents

If your documents show a full-time employment plan, long academic study, or family relocation, the officer may conclude you chose the wrong category.

Insufficient funds

Weak balances, recent unexplained deposits, or statements that do not show real access to the money can trigger refusal.

Incomplete application

Missing police certificate, insurance, photos, translations, or apostilles can lead to delays or refusal.

Wrong consular jurisdiction

Applying at a post that does not accept your residence/nationality profile can cause rejection.

Prior overstays or immigration violations

Past violations in Brazil or elsewhere can affect the credibility of temporary intent.

Unverifiable documents

Screenshots, altered statements, or uncertified translations can cause refusal and potentially more serious consequences.

Insurance problems

Insurance that excludes Brazil, excludes repatriation, or covers too short a period may be rejected.

Interview problems

Inconsistent answers about your purpose, work plans, accommodation, or funds can undermine the application.

Common Mistake: Treating Working Holiday like a tourist visa with side work. It is a specific youth-mobility program with its own legal basis and evidence requirements.

7. Benefits of this visa

Main benefits

  • lets eligible young nationals stay in Brazil longer than a short tourist trip
  • allows a lawful cultural exchange experience
  • may permit temporary work under the agreement
  • can support travel while earning locally
  • often offers more flexibility than a pure tourism route

Legal rights and practical benefits

Depending on the agreement and stay length, holders may benefit from:

  • lawful admission for the approved purpose
  • ability to undertake permitted temporary work
  • ability to travel in and out of Brazil if the visa is issued as multiple-entry
  • possibility of registering and living temporarily in Brazil during validity
  • indirect future path to another status if later eligible

Family benefits

Usually very limited, because this is normally an individual youth mobility route.

Study/business benefits

  • short incidental study may be possible
  • business networking in the ordinary course of travel may be possible, but this is not a business establishment visa

8. Limitations and restrictions

Key restrictions

  • only available to certain nationalities
  • age-limited
  • temporary only
  • usually no dependent sponsorship built in
  • not meant for permanent settlement
  • not a substitute for a standard work visa
  • often limited to one participation
  • may be non-extendable beyond the bilateral maximum

Compliance restrictions

You may need to:

  • register with Federal Police after arrival
  • keep your address updated if required
  • avoid work outside the permitted scope
  • maintain valid status and avoid overstay
  • maintain health insurance if required

Study limits

Long-term or degree-focused study usually requires a student route instead.

Employer dependence

This is usually not employer-sponsored, but that does not mean unrestricted labor rights. Work still must fit the program.

9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules

Visa validity

The visa validity is usually tied to:

  • the bilateral agreement
  • reciprocity practice
  • the specific consular issuance

Many working holiday schemes are issued for up to 12 months, but this must be verified for your nationality.

Length of stay

The authorized stay may be:

  • the same as visa validity, or
  • a separate period determined at issuance and admission

Entries

Often multiple-entry, but not guaranteed.

When the clock starts

Normally:

  • the visa has an entry validity period during which you must enter Brazil
  • the authorized stay begins upon entry/admission

Exact structure varies by visa sticker wording and consular practice.

Overstay consequences

Overstaying in Brazil can lead to:

  • fines
  • difficulty with future visas or residence
  • possible immigration enforcement consequences

Renewal timing

If extension is possible under your agreement, apply before expiry. In many cases, however, extension may not be available.

Grace periods

No general grace period should be assumed unless an official source clearly states one.

Bridging/interim status

Brazil does not generally operate the same “bridging visa” terminology used in some other countries. Do not assume protected status after expiry.

10. Complete document checklist

Because this visa is nationality- and consulate-specific, the exact checklist can vary. Below is the most complete practical structure.

A. Core documents

Document What it is Why needed Common mistakes
Visa application form Official consular form/system submission Starts the application Typos, inconsistent dates, wrong visa selection
Passport Current travel document Identity and travel authority Damage, low validity, missing pages
Photo Consular passport-style photo Identification Wrong size/background/expression
Proof of eligibility under agreement Sometimes nationality/passport alone; sometimes extra declaration Confirms route eligibility Assuming nationality is enough without checking post rules

B. Identity/travel documents

  • current passport
  • copy of biodata page
  • copies of prior visas if requested
  • proof of legal residence in the country where applying, if not applying in your country of nationality

C. Financial documents

  • recent bank statements
  • bank letter if requested
  • proof of savings
  • proof of return/onward ticket funds

Common mistakes

  • large unexplained recent deposits
  • online screenshots with missing account holder details
  • statements not in applicant’s name

D. Employment/business documents

Usually not central, but may help show profile and ties:

  • current employment letter
  • leave approval
  • recent payslips
  • self-employment registration documents, if relevant

E. Education documents

Sometimes optional or agreement-specific:

  • university enrollment letter
  • diploma/certificate
  • student status letter

F. Relationship/family documents

Usually not required unless:

  • showing host accommodation
  • addressing name changes
  • proving parental consent for a minor applicant, if exceptionally permitted

G. Accommodation/travel documents

  • flight reservation, return ticket, or proof of onward travel funds
  • initial accommodation booking or host address if requested
  • travel itinerary

H. Sponsor/invitation documents

Not always applicable, but where used:

  • invitation letter from host
  • host ID/residence proof
  • proof of address

I. Health/insurance documents

  • health/travel insurance certificate
  • policy wording showing territorial coverage and dates
  • repatriation coverage if required

J. Country-specific extras

Possible extras depending on your consulate/nationality:

  • police certificate(s)
  • birth certificate
  • declaration of no dependents
  • declaration of purpose
  • proof you have not previously used the program
  • apostilled civil records

K. Minor/dependent-specific documents

Not applicable for this visa in most cases because it is generally not a dependent route and often limited to adults.

L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs

This varies by post, but applicants may need:

  • sworn translation into Portuguese for some documents
  • apostille under the Hague Apostille Convention where applicable
  • notarized copies in some jurisdictions

Warning: Never assume English-language documents are automatically accepted. Follow the consulate’s exact rule.

M. Photo specifications

Use the exact specification from your consulate. Typical issues include:

  • wrong size
  • non-white background
  • shadows
  • smiling
  • glasses glare
  • outdated photo

11. Financial requirements

Minimum funds

The exact minimum is agreement-specific and consulate-specific. Many working holiday programs require proof of:

  • initial maintenance funds, and
  • separate return/onward travel funds if no ticket is already purchased

Brazil does not publish one universal VITEM-VI amount for all nationalities in one central source.

Who can sponsor?

Usually the applicant should show personal funds. Third-party sponsorship may not be preferred unless the consulate expressly allows it.

Acceptable proof of funds

Usually strongest:

  • recent official bank statements
  • bank certification letters
  • account statements showing applicant name, balance, and transaction history

Weaker evidence:

  • screenshots without authentication
  • cryptocurrency holdings without convertibility proof
  • borrowed money with no explanation

Seasoning rules

Not always expressly published, but officers may scrutinize recent large deposits. If funds were recently transferred, explain them clearly.

Statement period

Often 3 to 6 months is prudent unless the consulate states otherwise.

Hidden costs

Applicants should budget for:

  • airfare
  • insurance
  • visa fee
  • translations/apostille
  • police certificates
  • initial housing deposit
  • local registration costs
  • living expenses before first lawful income

12. Fees and total cost

Official fees vary by nationality and reciprocity, and some posts update them frequently.

Fee table

Cost item Official position
Visa application fee Varies by nationality/reciprocity and consular post
Processing/service fee May apply depending on post/provider
Biometrics fee May be built into local process or not separately charged
Medical exam fee Usually not a standard central requirement for this route, unless specifically requested
Police certificate cost Paid to the issuing authority in your country
Translation/notary/apostille cost Varies by country and document count
Courier fee May apply if passport return is mailed
Insurance cost Private market cost, varies by age, duration, and coverage
Renewal fee Only relevant if extension is actually available
Dependent fee Generally not applicable
Priority fee Usually not publicly offered for this route

Warning: Check the latest official fee page of the Brazilian embassy/consulate handling your case. Reciprocity-based fees can change.

13. Step-by-step application process

1. Confirm the correct visa

Make sure:

  • your nationality is covered
  • your age fits the agreement
  • your purpose matches working holiday, not study/work/family migration

2. Gather documents

Collect passport, funds, insurance, police record, photo, and any nationality-specific forms.

3. Complete the visa application form

Brazil uses an official online consular application system in many posts.

4. Pay fees

Follow the exact payment method required by the consulate.

5. Book appointment/interview if required

Some posts require in-person attendance.

6. Submit the application

This may be:

  • in person
  • by appointment
  • partly online and partly in person
  • occasionally by mail only if the post permits

7. Upload/send documents and passport

Follow formatting and original/copy rules carefully.

8. Complete police/health requirements if needed

Provide police certificates and insurance documents; medicals only if specifically requested.

9. Track the application

Use the consulate’s system if available.

10. Respond to additional document requests

Respond quickly and completely.

11. Decision

If approved, the visa is placed in the passport or issued according to local post procedures.

12. Receive visa

Check:

  • name spelling
  • passport number
  • visa category
  • validity dates
  • entries

13. Travel to Brazil

Carry supporting documents in hand luggage.

14. Register after arrival if required

If your stay requires immigration registration, book Federal Police registration promptly.

15. Obtain local registration document if applicable

This may include the CRNM process after Federal Police registration.

14. Processing time

There is no single public nationwide processing time consistently published for VITEM-VI across all posts.

What affects timing

  • nationality and agreement
  • consular workload
  • seasonality
  • completeness of documents
  • police/background review
  • local appointment availability
  • whether translations or legalization are missing

Practical expectation

Expect:

  • several weeks in many cases
  • longer if extra verification is required
  • delays during holiday/high travel periods

Pro Tip: Apply early enough to absorb delays, but not so early that key documents expire before issuance.

15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks

Biometrics

Consular attendance requirements vary by post.

Interview

Some applicants may be interviewed, especially if:

  • the purpose seems unclear
  • documents are inconsistent
  • the post routinely interviews temporary visa applicants

Typical questions

  • Why do you want a working holiday in Brazil?
  • How will you support yourself?
  • Do you have a return plan?
  • What kind of work do you expect to do?
  • Have you used a working holiday visa before?

Medical

A routine immigration medical is not consistently published as a universal rule for this visa, unlike in some other countries. However, a post may request extra health documentation in specific cases.

Police checks

Police certificates are commonly relevant. Requirements may include:

  • certificate from country of nationality
  • certificate from current residence country
  • recent issuance date
  • legalization/apostille and translation where required

16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality

Official approval data

No consolidated public official approval-rate dataset for Brazil’s VITEM-VI working holiday category was identified in central official sources.

Practical refusal patterns

Most refusals likely stem from:

  • ineligibility by nationality or age
  • missing bilateral eligibility
  • wrong visa category
  • weak or unclear finances
  • incomplete police/insurance documents
  • poor consistency between form answers and supporting evidence

17. How to strengthen the application legally

Practical, ethical ways to improve your case

1. Use a clear cover letter

Briefly explain:

  • why you qualify under the specific bilateral agreement
  • your travel goals
  • how you will finance your stay
  • that you understand the temporary nature of the visa

2. Present funds cleanly

Use statements that clearly show:

  • your name
  • account number
  • running balance
  • enough money for maintenance and return travel

If there is a recent large deposit, explain it with evidence.

3. Match all dates

Your form, itinerary, insurance dates, and bank evidence should align.

4. Add a document index

A one-page checklist/index makes review easier and reduces confusion.

5. Translate properly

If translation is required, use the officially accepted translation method.

6. Show purpose clarity

Do not describe plans that sound like permanent employment or immigration.

7. Keep your application honest and simple

If you have prior refusals or overstays, disclose them where required and explain them clearly.

18. Insider tips, practical hacks, and smart applicant strategies

Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies

  • Apply after your funds have stabilized. If possible, avoid applying immediately after transferring money into the account.
  • Use one master PDF index. Even if the post accepts separate uploads, a cover index helps officers understand the file quickly.
  • Mirror the consulate checklist order. Put your documents in exactly the same order as the official checklist.
  • Label translated documents clearly. Example: 05_Police_Certificate_Original.pdf and 05_Police_Certificate_Translation.pdf.
  • Buy refundable or changeable travel bookings if the post warns against non-refundable tickets before approval.
  • Keep insurance wording handy at the border. Officers may want to see the policy dates and coverage.
  • If you had a prior visa refusal anywhere, disclose it honestly if asked. Hidden refusal history can create a bigger issue than the refusal itself.
  • Contact the consulate only after reading the full official page. Consulates often ignore questions already answered on their site.
  • If documents differ by name format, add an explanation note. This helps with middle names, accents, and order-of-name differences.

19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance

When needed

Not always formally required, but highly useful.

What to include

  1. your full name, passport number, nationality
  2. the visa sought: VITEM-VI Working Holiday
  3. the bilateral eligibility basis
  4. planned travel period
  5. how you will support yourself
  6. acknowledgment of the visa’s temporary purpose
  7. list of attached supporting documents

What not to say

  • “I plan to move permanently to Brazil”
  • “I already have a full-time job lined up that will sponsor me later” unless directly relevant and truthful
  • vague or contradictory travel/work plans

Sample outline

  • Introduction and visa request
  • Eligibility under the relevant agreement
  • Travel and cultural plans
  • Financial support and insurance
  • Return/onward intent and compliance statement
  • Attached evidence list

20. Sponsor / inviter guidance

Is a sponsor required?

Usually no.

If staying with a host

A host letter may help if accommodation proof is requested.

Useful contents of a host letter

  • host full name
  • address in Brazil
  • contact details
  • relationship to applicant
  • confirmation of accommodation dates
  • copy of host ID/status if requested

Sponsor mistakes

  • vague invitation
  • no address proof
  • letter signed by someone who cannot prove residence
  • claiming financial support when the program expects self-funding

21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children

Are dependents allowed?

Generally no built-in dependent route under working holiday status.

What this means in practice

  • spouse/partner usually cannot be added as a dependent on your VITEM-VI
  • each person would need their own independent immigration basis
  • children are generally not the intended beneficiaries of this youth program

Partner definition rules

Not generally relevant because this is usually not a family-based route.

Separate or combined applications

If both partners are independently eligible nationals under an agreement, they may each apply separately.

Warning: Do not assume that marriage to another applicant gives you derivative rights under this visa.

22. Work rights, study rights, and business activity rules

Work rights

Work is the defining special feature of a working holiday visa, but it is still limited by the bilateral agreement and not equivalent to unrestricted labor migration.

Usually allowed

  • temporary/short-term employment
  • casual work to fund travel
  • lawful paid work within program rules

Usually not intended

  • permanent full-time employment migration
  • labor activity outside immigration and labor compliance rules

Self-employment

Public guidance is often unclear. Small-scale lawful activity may or may not be acceptable depending on how the work is structured.

Remote work

Unclear in public guidance. Verify with the consulate if this is central to your plan.

Internships

Possibly allowed only if they fit the legal framework; otherwise a different route may be needed.

Volunteering

Allowed only if genuinely unpaid and not replacing regular paid labor.

Study rights

Incidental or short study may be possible, but the visa is not primarily for full-time academic study.

Business activity

Ordinary networking and lawful incidental business discussions may be fine, but running a structured long-term business operation is not what this visa is for.

Taxable activity

If you work in Brazil, tax consequences may arise. Immigration permission does not exempt you from tax rules.

23. Travel rules and border entry issues

Visa is not a guarantee of admission

A Brazilian visa allows you to travel to the border and seek admission. Final entry remains subject to border control.

Documents to carry

Bring:

  • passport with visa
  • copy of insurance
  • proof of funds
  • return/onward ticket or funds
  • accommodation details
  • host contact details if applicable

Border questions you may face

  • Where will you stay?
  • How long will you remain?
  • How will you support yourself?
  • What kind of work, if any, do you expect to do?

Re-entry

If the visa is multiple-entry, re-entry is usually possible during validity, subject to status compliance.

New passport issues

If your passport expires after visa issuance, contact the consulate or verify Federal Police/border practice on traveling with old and new passports.

Dual nationals

Travel using the passport linked to the visa application unless official guidance says otherwise.

24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion

Can it be extended?

Usually limited and often not beyond the bilateral maximum. Many working holiday schemes are one-time and non-renewable.

Inside-country renewal

Possible only if Brazilian law and the relevant agreement permit it. This is not something to assume.

Switching to another visa/status

Possible only if you separately qualify for another immigration route under Brazilian law, such as:

  • work/residence authorization
  • family reunion
  • student residence
  • digital nomad route
  • investment/executive residence

But the ability to switch from inside Brazil is case-specific and can depend on the target route.

Restoration/reinstatement

Brazil does not use some of the same formal “restoration” concepts seen elsewhere. Once out of status, options become riskier and more limited.

Common Mistake: Assuming a working holiday visa can simply be converted into any work visa after arrival. Conversion depends on the new category’s own requirements.

25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway

Does this visa lead directly to PR?

No direct built-in PR path.

Can it help indirectly?

Yes, only indirectly, if during or after your stay you become eligible under another route, such as:

  • marriage/family reunion
  • employer-sponsored residence
  • investment route
  • other residence authorization under Brazilian law

Does time count?

Whether time spent on VITEM-VI counts toward later residence or naturalization calculations depends on:

  • the later status obtained
  • continuity of lawful residence
  • naturalization rules in force at that time

Citizenship

Brazilian citizenship is not based on this visa alone. Naturalization generally requires a qualifying period of lawful residence and compliance with broader legal requirements.

26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations

Tax residence

If you stay long enough or establish tax residence under Brazilian rules, you may have tax obligations.

Social security

If you work in Brazil, employer and labor law compliance may bring social contribution issues depending on the type of employment.

Registration obligations

Longer-stay temporary visa holders may need to register with the Polícia Federal.

Address and ID

After registration, you may need to maintain updated address information and obtain local documentation such as a CRNM if applicable.

CPF

In practice, many foreigners in Brazil obtain a CPF for banking, employment, rentals, and transactions. This is not the same as immigration status but is often practically important.

Overstay and violations

Do not:

  • overstay
  • work outside the visa’s limits
  • fail to register when required
  • provide false information

27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions

This section is extremely important for VITEM-VI.

Bilateral agreement differences

Rules can vary by nationality on:

  • age ceiling
  • maximum stay
  • number of entries
  • annual quotas
  • required minimum funds
  • whether prior participation is allowed
  • insurance details
  • whether dependents are barred expressly

Visa waivers

A tourist visa waiver for your nationality does not replace a working holiday visa if you want working holiday rights.

Special passport categories

Diplomatic/official/service passports may be governed by different rules, but that is outside the ordinary applicant profile.

28. Special cases and edge cases

Minors

Usually not applicable because working holiday programs generally require adulthood.

Same-sex spouses/partners

Brazil recognizes same-sex relationships in broader immigration law, but that does not create dependent rights under this working holiday route.

Stateless persons / refugees

This route is nationality-agreement based, so stateless or protection-status applicants may face structural ineligibility unless specific official guidance says otherwise.

Dual nationals

If one of your nationalities is covered by a Brazil working holiday agreement, you may be able to apply using that passport, subject to consular rules.

Prior refusals

A prior refusal does not always bar approval, but it should be disclosed where required and explained.

Criminal records

Case-by-case. Even non-serious records can complicate temporary visa adjudication.

Applying from a third country

Sometimes possible, but many consulates require residence in their jurisdiction.

Name changes / gender marker mismatch

Add legal change-of-name documents or explanatory records if passport and supporting documents differ.

Previous deportation/removal

This can seriously affect eligibility and should be addressed carefully, ideally with professional legal advice.

29. Common myths and mistakes

Myth vs Fact

Myth Fact
“Anyone under 30 can get Brazil’s working holiday visa.” False. Only nationals of partner countries can usually apply.
“It’s basically a tourist visa with open work rights.” False. It is a specific temporary visa under bilateral agreements.
“I can bring my spouse and children as dependents.” Usually false. This route is generally individual, not family-based.
“If I get the visa, border entry is guaranteed.” False. Final admission is always at the discretion of border authorities.
“I can use it for full-time university study.” Usually false. It is not primarily a student visa.
“I don’t need insurance if I have money.” Often false. Insurance is commonly a formal requirement.
“I can convert it automatically into permanent residence.” False. You need to qualify separately under another route.

30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication

What happens after refusal?

You should receive a refusal notice or explanation, though the level of detail may vary by post.

Is there an appeal?

Brazilian consular visa refusals do not always have a formal broad appeal mechanism publicly laid out in the same way as some other systems. Whether reconsideration or reapplication is possible depends on the post and the reason.

Reapplication

Often the practical route is to:

  1. identify the refusal reason
  2. correct it fully
  3. reapply with stronger documentation

Fee refund

Visa fees are usually not refundable after processing begins, unless official policy says otherwise.

When to seek legal help

Consider legal help if refusal involves:

  • misrepresentation allegations
  • criminal inadmissibility issues
  • prior deportation/removal
  • complicated status history in Brazil
  • unclear legal eligibility under a bilateral agreement

31. Arrival in Brazil: what happens next?

At immigration control

You present:

  • passport with visa
  • supporting travel documents if asked

After entry

If your stay triggers registration requirements, you may need to:

  • schedule Polícia Federal registration
  • present passport and immigration documents
  • provide local address
  • pay any registration fee if applicable
  • receive proof of registration / pursue CRNM issuance

Practical first steps

Within your first days/weeks, you may also need to:

  • secure accommodation
  • obtain a CPF
  • set up a Brazilian phone number
  • open a bank account if eligible and needed
  • understand tax and work compliance for any employment

32. Real-world timeline examples

Scenario 1: Solo working holiday traveler

  • Week 1–2: confirm nationality eligibility and age requirement
  • Week 2–4: gather passport, bank statements, insurance, police certificate
  • Week 4: submit application
  • Week 6–10: decision period
  • Week 10–12: receive visa and travel
  • First 30–90 days in Brazil: register if required, get CPF, begin lawful temporary work search

Scenario 2: Couple where both partners are independently eligible

  • Each applicant files separately
  • Shared accommodation plans may be cross-referenced
  • If one is approved earlier, the other still needs independent approval
  • Neither should assume dependent status

Scenario 3: Applicant with recent large transfer into savings

  • Delay filing until bank record clearly shows source
  • Attach sale agreement/gift letter/salary bonus proof if legitimate
  • Add concise explanation note

Scenario 4: Applicant applying from third country

  • First confirm consular jurisdiction
  • Provide residence permit in that country
  • Expect extra scrutiny on local eligibility to apply there

Scenario 5: Applicant hoping to switch later to family residence

  • Enter on working holiday only if genuinely eligible and temporary purpose is real
  • If family circumstances later change legitimately, explore a separate residence route inside the legal framework

33. Ideal document pack structure

Recommended file order

  1. Document index
  2. Visa application confirmation page
  3. Passport biodata page
  4. Passport photo
  5. Eligibility note under the bilateral agreement
  6. Bank statements
  7. Return/onward travel evidence
  8. Insurance certificate and policy wording
  9. Police certificate(s)
  10. Accommodation/host evidence
  11. Cover letter
  12. Supporting employment/education documents
  13. Translations
  14. Apostilles/legalizations

Naming convention

Use clear names such as:

  • 01_Index.pdf
  • 02_Application_Form.pdf
  • 03_Passport_Biodata.pdf
  • 04_Bank_Statements_Jan-Mar_2026.pdf

Scan quality tips

  • color scans
  • all edges visible
  • 300 dpi is usually sufficient
  • no shadows or cropped pages
  • merge multipage statements into one PDF per item

34. Exact checklists

Pre-application checklist

  • confirm your nationality is eligible
  • confirm your age is within the permitted range
  • confirm the correct Brazilian consulate
  • check official fee and document rules
  • obtain passport with sufficient validity
  • obtain insurance
  • prepare funds evidence
  • obtain police certificate if required
  • prepare translations/apostilles

Submission-day checklist

  • form completed correctly
  • visa category selected correctly
  • photos compliant
  • all documents signed where needed
  • fee payment proof ready
  • originals and copies prepared if required

Biometrics/interview-day checklist

  • passport
  • appointment confirmation
  • fee receipt
  • printed checklist
  • concise explanation of purpose
  • supporting originals

Arrival checklist

  • carry all key documents
  • know your first accommodation address
  • know whether Federal Police registration is required
  • have local contact details saved
  • plan how to get CPF if needed

Extension/renewal checklist

  • verify if extension is legally possible
  • confirm deadline before expiry
  • gather updated funds/insurance if required
  • avoid last-minute filings

Refusal recovery checklist

  • read refusal reason carefully
  • identify what was missing or unclear
  • gather stronger documentary proof
  • write a point-by-point correction note
  • reapply only when the defect is genuinely fixed

35. FAQs

1. Is Brazil’s VITEM-VI available to all nationalities?

No. It is generally limited to nationals of countries that have a working holiday agreement with Brazil.

2. What age do I need to be?

It depends on the agreement for your nationality, often 18–30 or 18–35.

3. Do I need a job offer before applying?

Usually no.

4. Can I go to Brazil first as a tourist and then start working on arrival?

Do not assume that. Work rights should come from the correct status, not tourist entry.

5. Is this the same as Brazil’s digital nomad visa?

No.

6. Can I work full time for one employer all year?

The visa is not intended as a standard long-term work visa. Check your agreement’s limits.

7. Can I freelance in Brazil?

Possibly unclear. Verify with the consulate because self-employment treatment is not always publicly detailed.

8. Can I study Portuguese while on this visa?

Short incidental study may be possible, but this is not primarily a student route.

9. Do I need health insurance?

Usually yes.

10. How much money do I need?

The amount varies by nationality/agreement and consular instructions.

11. Can my spouse join me as a dependent?

Usually no.

12. Can my spouse apply separately?

Yes, if they independently qualify under an applicable agreement.

13. Do I need a return ticket?

Often either a return ticket or enough funds to purchase one.

14. How long can I stay?

Usually up to the agreement maximum, often around 12 months, but verify for your nationality.

15. Is the visa multiple-entry?

Often yes, but not always. Check the visa once issued.

16. Can I extend it from inside Brazil?

Only if the specific legal framework and agreement allow it.

17. Can I switch to a work visa later?

Only if you separately qualify under a different immigration route.

18. Does this visa lead to permanent residence?

Not directly.

19. Do I need a police certificate?

Often yes.

20. Can I apply from a country where I am only visiting?

Often no. Many consulates require residence in their jurisdiction.

21. What if my bank balance increased recently?

Explain the source with documents.

22. Will a prior visa refusal in another country ruin my case?

Not necessarily, but answer honestly if asked and address it clearly.

23. Is Portuguese required?

Usually no formal language test is published, but basic Portuguese can help in practice.

24. What happens if I overstay?

You may face fines and future immigration problems.

25. Do I need to register after arrival?

Possibly yes, especially for longer temporary stays. Check Federal Police rules.

26. Can I enter Brazil after the visa validity start date but before expiry?

Usually yes, as long as you enter before the visa’s last entry date and within its rules.

27. Can I use savings in a parent’s account?

Usually weaker than personal funds unless the consulate clearly accepts sponsored maintenance.

28. Is a cover letter required?

Not always, but it is strongly recommended.

29. Can I volunteer on farms or hostels?

Only if lawful and genuinely unpaid; avoid arrangements that look like disguised labor.

30. Can I apply if my passport expires soon?

Probably risky. Renew first if validity is short.

36. Official sources and verification

Below are official Brazilian government and diplomatic sources relevant to this visa category, visa procedures, and post-arrival compliance.

Note: Brazilian embassies and consulates often publish nationality-specific working holiday details on their own pages. You should consult the exact embassy/consulate responsible for your nationality or residence, because VITEM-VI implementation is highly post-specific.

37. Final verdict

Brazil’s VITEM-VI Temporary Visa – Working Holiday is best for young nationals of partner countries who want a lawful, temporary, culturally focused stay in Brazil with the possibility of working within program limits.

Biggest benefits

  • longer youth-mobility stay in Brazil
  • lawful working holiday framework
  • cultural exchange plus travel flexibility
  • possible temporary work rights without a prior job offer

Biggest risks

  • assuming eligibility when your nationality is not covered
  • misunderstanding work rights
  • weak financial evidence
  • missing consulate-specific document rules
  • assuming family/dependent rights exist when they usually do not

Top preparation advice

  1. confirm your nationality-specific eligibility first
  2. use the exact checklist of your Brazilian consulate
  3. prepare strong personal funds evidence
  4. buy proper insurance
  5. keep your purpose consistent: holiday/cultural exchange first, work within legal limits second

When to consider another visa

Choose another route if your real goal is:

  • long-term employment
  • remote work as a digital nomad
  • degree study
  • family migration
  • investment
  • permanent relocation

Information gaps or items to verify before applying

  • whether your nationality is currently covered by an active Brazil working holiday agreement
  • the exact age limit for your nationality
  • whether there is an annual quota/cap
  • the exact minimum funds required
  • whether a return ticket is mandatory or funds are enough
  • whether multiple entry is guaranteed for your nationality
  • whether the visa is extendable
  • whether prior participation in the program is allowed
  • whether a police certificate is required from one or multiple countries
  • whether your documents need apostille and/or sworn Portuguese translation
  • whether your consulate accepts applications from third-country residents
  • whether remote work/self-employment is accepted under your agreement
  • whether post-arrival Federal Police registration is required for your exact stay length
  • the latest fee amount and payment method
  • current processing times at your consular post
  • any temporary operational changes, appointment shortages, or policy updates at the relevant Brazilian embassy or consulate

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