Brazil finalized a comprehensive regulatory package on July 1 that tightens oversight of crypto-asset platforms. The new rules will come into force from January 1, 2027 and will impose higher capital adequacy, risk management and transparency obligations for companies providing crypto trading, custody, transaction transmission and similar digital asset services.
Regulatory framework expanded
The Central Bank of Brazil required virtual asset service providers covered by the regulation to maintain a minimum capital buffer against possible financial losses. Companies will also need to establish formal risk management structures and submit regular reports on their financial situation and operational activities to competent authorities.
The Central Bank revealed that these steps aim to strengthen market stability and protect users. Thus, the standards applied to companies in the crypto asset space have been brought closer to traditionally regulated financial institutions.
The framework adopted by the Central Bank of Brazil subjects crypto platforms to a stricter supervisory regime in terms of capital, risk management and reporting.
Crypto companies given new corporate classification
Organizations defined as SPSAV in Brazil’s regulatory structure will be the direct addressee of these new obligations. These organizations; It operates in areas such as digital money and tokenized asset transactions, custody services, trading brokerage and customer fund transfer. As the country’s monetary authority, the Central Bank of Brazil plays a central role in supervising the banking system and payment infrastructure.
Under the new framework, these service providers and their associated company structures were included in the Entity Type 3 category. This status means that a similar oversight regime will be applied to securities brokerages and distribution companies. Regulators assessed that similar scale supervision is required for institutions with similar risk profiles.
The new classification forces crypto companies to make more comprehensive preparations in corporate governance, capital planning and internal audit.
This change could increase compliance costs, especially for smaller market players. Platforms will be expected to strengthen their loss absorption capacity, establish continuous risk monitoring infrastructure and update their governance mechanisms.
Transition schedule and additional restrictions determined
Authorities will move all virtual asset service providers to the Segment 4 class by June 30, 2028. This change will be applied regardless of company size and will further increase prudential supervision. The phased schedule gives companies additional time for compliance before full implementation.
The same regulatory package also prohibited financial institutions within the scope of Segment 5 from offering virtual asset services. Segment 5 covers smaller financial institutions operating under a lighter regulatory framework. The Central Bank concluded that cryptoasset services require stricter oversight than permitted for this category.
It is a continuation of previous steps
The latest regulations complement Brazil’s previous steps towards the crypto market. The rules, which came into force in November 2025, covered governance structures, anti-money laundering practices, foreign exchange transactions and operational requirements.
Additional measures have also been put in place throughout 2026. The National Monetary Council has required platforms to comply with banking privacy standards under Supplementary Law 105. The Central Bank, on the other hand, required an independent financial audit before operating permit approvals and license renewals.


