How to get a Brazilain Tourist Visa
No Ticky, No Laundry
Citizens of the United States and Canada are required to obtain a Visa for entry into the country of Brazil. No exceptions! The Brazilians require this because the United States and Canada require an entry visa for Brazilians entering the US and Canada. On top of that the Brazilian visa cost exactly the same amount as the USA charges the Brazilians at US consulates in Brazil! It would appear that the process for getting a Brazilian tourist visa is complicated. It is not. Because so many countries do not require North Americans to obtain visa’s, it is more likely to be our unfamiliarity with the process rather than the process itself. Here is a basic break down of the process of getting your Brazilian Tourist Visa.
Traveler holding a passport issued by the following countries do not need a visa to enter Brazil: Argentina, Austria, Bahamas, Barbados, Belgium, Bolivia, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Croatia, Denmark, Ecuador, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Guatemala, Honduras, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Macau, Malaysia, Monaco, Morocco, Namibia, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Portugal, San Marino, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Suriname, Sweden, Switzerland, Trinidad & Tobago, Turkey, United Kingdom, Uruguay, Vatican and Venezuela.
You’re Passport
You will need a current US/Canadian passport. The passport must have the following:
- It must not expire within 180 days of your scheduled date of departure from Brazil.
- Your passport must be signed.*
- Your passport must have three pages completely free and clear of any marks, stamps, other visas or endorsements. (This does not include pages 26, 27 , 28 in the regular size or pages 46, 47, 48 in the larger size US passports as these pages are for endorsements only and can not be used for visas to be applied to.)
* If you are applying for a new passport and using the same service to obtain both the passport and the Brazilian tourist visa , the service company may be able to get your new Brazilian Tourist Visa without your passport being signed. It has happened before. The service you use will advise you on this.
Photograph
You will be required to send in one passport styled photograph of yourself along with your passport and visa application. (The photograph in the passport does not have to match the photo accompanying the visa application) The following requirements must be met concerning the photograph:
- The photograph must be two inches by two inches.
- Color photo only with a white back ground
- Full view of the front of the face. (No side or partial side shots.)
- Subject needs to be clear and free of concealing articles of clothing. i.e. hats
- The background must be white or off white.
You’re Payment
Visas are big business for consulates. Currently the cost for a Brazilian tourist visa is $100 if you present your application in person at the consulate. $110 if you mail it or have a third party deliver it for you (commercial visa service). The ten dollar application fee is only waived if the applicant is the one delivering the passport. Some consulates will allow an immediate family member to drop off the application and have the fee waived. The only form of payment allowed by any of the eight different Brazilian consulates is a US Postal Money Order or the Canadian equivalent. They will not accept cash, checks or credit cards. Check the specific consulate below to see how the money order is to be made out. It varies.
Airline Ticket/Itinerary Travel Letter
Here is a potential problem area. Because airlines will do anything not to have to produce a paper ticket, proof of round trip transportation becomes an issue. A letter provided by your travel provider, has worked in the past put the best article of proof of return travel back to the US/Canada is in fact your airline travel agent’s travel schedule print out.
Getting your Application to and From the Consulate
You can send your completed application for a Brazilian Visa by any number of ways FedEx, DHL, UPS or the US postal service. Because you are sending your passport along with your application, it is wise to send it so as to be tracked. (Registered mail works fine.) Getting your passport returned is another mater. The consulates will only return passports via US MAIL regardless of how you sent them. You are required to include a self addressed envelope postage paid and affixed. Again it is wise the pay the additional amount to have it returned registered mail.
The Visa Application Itself
Use the list below to determine the specific consulate that handles visa applications from your state. Do not attempt to apply by mail to a consulate from outside that consulate’s jurisdiction.
After identifying the correct consulate, go to that consulates web site and down load their form. Different consulates have the same forms but with minor differences. The Washington consulate’s form is considered the generic form accepted by all the other consulates. When you down load the form you will need to capture both pages onto one sheet of paper. You can not staple two sheets of a print out together. (Check and see if you can fill out the form on line before down loading it. Really nice feature!)
Answer all of the questions that apply to you using blue or black ink only. Those questions not pertaining to you should be marked “N/A” for not applicable. Do not leave questions blank just because you feel they do not pertain to you. Line 16 is where you can list your email address should you have one. This is very helpful to the consulate should they need further clarification. Be sure and check off box 21. Many people for get to do this. Do not forget to sign and date the application.
Cover Letter
Cover letters are nice but not required. Should you chose to send one, you might want to request a 5 year tourist visa. Sense all visas cost the same, regardless of length of validity; go for the longest one, five years. Also take time to perhaps more fully explain the nature of your travel. This is a tourist visa leave out any hint of the words, work, religion, journalism, exploring ECT.
Yellow Fever Vaccination Requirement
As applicable, Yellow Fever Immunization International Certificate is required if the applicant has traveled within the last 90 days to any of the following countries: Angola, Benin, Bissau Guinea, Bolivia, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cabo Verde, Camerun, Central African Republic, Colombia, Congo, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ecuador, Equatorial Guinea, Ethiopia, French Guiana, Gabon, Gambia, Ghana, Guiana, Guinea, Ivory Coast, Kenia, Liberia, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, Panama, Peru, Rwanda, Sao Tome & Principe, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Somalia, Sudan, Surinam, Tanzania, Togo, Trinidad and Tobago, Uganda or Venezuela.
Yellow Fever Immunization International Certificate is advisable if applicant's destination in Brazil includes any of the following States: Acre, Amapá, Amazonas, Federal District, Goiás, Maranhão, Mato Grosso, Mato Grosso do Sul, Pará, Rondônia, Roraima and/or Tocantins.
Minors traveling to Brazil:
A person under 18 years of age not traveling with both parents or legal guardian(s) must provide a notarized letter of consent signed by the non-accompanying parent(s) or guardian authorizing this Consulate to issue a visa. A copy of the minor’s birth certificate or, as applicable, the guardianship document, is also required. Both parents must sign the minor’s application form.
Non US Citizens:
If you are a US resident and hold a passport other than a US passport and you need a visa, you will need to include your “Green Card” with your application if your passport does not have a valid US entry visa. If you are not a US citizen and are in the US applying for a Brazilian tourist visa and are traveling on to another country other than the US after visiting Brazil, you will be required to have a visa for the country you plan to visit after leaving Brazil if a visa is required for entry.
Walk In Applications
If you wish you may show up at any consulate and hand over your application and passport in person. The turn around time varies greatly by consulates and time of year. It is wise to go to the website for the specific consulate you plan to use. There you will find what times they are open, times of the day they take applications, times of the day they hand back the passports and the holidays they are closed on. (US and Brazilian holidays might I add!) Confirm the times posted on the website with a telephone call. This is a consulate of a foreign country and they do as they please without notice to anyone!
Commercial Visa Service
There are several commercial visa service companies that will walk your visa to the consulate, collect it and overnight it back to you. They usually have a good working relation with the consulate and the service can answer all of your questions through out the process. They take personal checks and credit cards and have no problem using FedEx next day return. There is a fee associated with this service and they do vary depending on the turn around time requested. Check the internet for a service that has an office in the city where the consulate for your state is located. Beware, the consulate in Washington, DC will grant visas out of their jurisdiction but they will only be good for 90 days but then that too changes on a regular basis.
Be careful getting travel information from the folks that work for a commercial visa service offices. While they may be very well versed in dealing with the local consulate, it is best to not seek out travel information from them. Most of the time they have never been to Brazil but have heard all kinds of rumors from all of the people calling in wanting information about how to get a visa! They are a source of much misleading information.
Step by Step
- Get a passport photo (2”X 2”)
- Go to the website of the consulate that handles your state. Verify times they are open and closed and their address. Down load a visa for that particular consulate.
Check on how the consulate wants the US Postal Money order made out. It varies! - Fill out the Brazilian Visa Form and sign it.
- Prepare an envelope to send the entire contents. Include:
- passport
- Signed tourist visa application
- 2”X2” photograph
- Travel itinerary/Copy of airline ticket
- Second envelope for the return of passport.
- Copy of your drivers license.
- Go to your post office and:
- Acquire a postal money order for the sum of $110 ($100 if you plan to take/walk it to the consulate yourself) made payable to the what ever is listed on the consulate’s website and place it in the envelope to the consulate.
- Secure the proper postage for the envelope to the consulate
- Secure and affix the proper postage for the return envelope to the return envelope and place it in the envelope address to the consulate.
- Enclose a copy of your drivers license or a utility bill that is in your name.
- Mail it.
Holidays Observed by the Consulate of Brazil in the US
- January, 1st Monday New Year
- January, 15th Monday Martin Luther King
- February, 19th Monday President's Day
- April, 06th Friday Good Friday
- May, 28th Monday Memorial day
- July, 4th Wednesday Independence Day
- September, 3rd Monday Labor Day
- September, 7th Friday Brazil's Independence Day
- October, 8th Monday Columbus Day
- November, 22nd Thursday Thanksgiving
- November, 23rd Friday Thanksgiving
- December, 25th Tuesday Christmas
LIST OF CONSULAR JURISDICTIONS FOR BRAZIL IN THE UNITED STATES
Brazilian Consulate General in Boston
The Stattler Building
20 Park Plaza, suite 1420
Boston, MA 02116
Phone: (617) 542-4000
Fax: (617) 542-4318
E-mail: cgbos@consulatebrazil.org
Web site: http://www.consulatebrazil.org
Jurisdiction: States of Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont.
Note: The Boston consulate of Brazil will only hand out 20 numbers each
morning for those wanting to apply for a tourist visa in person. If you do
not receive a number you will not be able to apply that day.
Note: Your passport only needs one page free of any marks, stamps etc.
Note: The Consulate’s visa office is open to the public Monday through Friday
between 10 AM and 12 PM and accepts up to 20 applications per day. The
processed visas may be picked up Monday through Friday between 9 AM
and 2 PM.
Note: The Us Postal money order must be made out to Consulate General of Brazil.
Note: The consulate will accept telephone calls at 617-542-4000, extension 3130 between 3 PM and 5 PM.
Brazilian Consulate General in Chicago
401 North Michigan Avenue, Suite 3050
Chicago, IL 60611
Phone: (312) 464-0244/5/6/7
Fax: (312) 464-0299
E-mail: central@brazilconsulatechicago.org
Jurisdiction: States of Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wisconsin.
Note: The Chicago consulate of Brazil does not have a website. As such AmazonAngling.com strongly recommends the use of a visa service. Here is one of just a few in the Chicago area: American Visa Service, 53 West Jackson, Blvd Suite 1228 Chicago, Illinois 60604 312-922-8860 FAX 312-922-7578.
Note: Some tourist applicants have been required to include a signed affidavit from there employer.
Brazilian Consulate General in Houston
Park Tower North
1233 West Loop South, Suite 1150
Houston, TX 77027
Phones: (713) 961-3063/961-3064/961-3065
Fax: (713) 961-3070
E-mail: visas@brazilhouston.org
Web site:http://www.brazilhouston.org
Jurisdiction: States of Arkansas, Colorado, Kansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma,and Texas.
Note: The US Postal money order must be made payable to: Consulate General of Brazil in Houston.
(Visa Service/Houston: http://quickpassport.com, 888 629 2016)
Brazilian Consulate General in Miami
80 SW 8th St. - Suite 2600
Miami, FL 33130
Phone: (305) 285-6200
Fax: (305) 285-6240
Fax on demand for information and forms: (305) 285-6259
E-mail: visa@brazilmiami.org
Website:http://www.brazilmiami.org
Jurisdiction: States of Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee. Puerto Rico, US Virgin Islands, and Bahamas.
Note: Receives application daily from 09:00 to 11:00. Pick up is the next day from 12:00 to 13:00.
Note: Requires a photo copy of applicant’s driver’s license.
Note: Will accept FedEx for delivery. US postal service only for the return.
Note: US postal money orders must be made out to Consulate General of Brazil
Note: Will accept phone calls from 15:00-16:00 EST. 305-285-6200
(VISA SERVICE/Miami: http://www.passportsandvisas.com, 800 860 8610)
Brazilian Consulate General in New York
1185 Avenue of the Americas (Sixth Avenue), 21st Floor
New York, NY 10036
Phone: (917) 777-7777
Fax: (212) 827-0225
E-mail:vistos@brazilny.org
Website:http://www.brazilny.org
Jurisdiction: States of Connecticut, Delaware, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania and the Bermuda Island
Note: The US Postal money order must be made out to: Consulate General of Brazil.
Note:Drop off times are 10:00-12:00. Pick up times are 14:30 to 16:00. Anyone can pick up a passport for you as long as they have the receipt.
Brazilian Consulate General in San Francisco
300 Montgomery Street, suite 900
San Francisco, CA, 94104
Phone: (415) 981-8170
Fax: (415) 981-4931
E-mail:consular@brazilsf.org
Website:http://www.brazilsf.org
Jurisdiction: States of Oregon, Washington, Alaska and in the State of California, the counties of Alameda, Alpine, Amador, Butte, Calaveras, Colusa, Contra Costa, Del Norte, El Dorado, Fresno, Glenn, Humboldt, Inyo, Kings, Lake, Lassen, Ladera, Marin, Mariposa, Mendocino, Merced, Modoc, Mono, Monterey, Napa, Nevada, Placer, Plumas, Sacramento, San Benedito, San Francisco, San Joaquin, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, Shasta, Sierra, Siskyou, Solano, Sonoma, Stanislau, Sutter, Tehama, Trinity, Tulare, Tuolunme, Yolo, and Yuma
Note: All visa applications must be submitted in person, by the applicant, or by a duly authorized third party (for example: family member, friend, co-worker, travel agency, visa service). Please note that this Consulate General does not accept visas applications sent by mail. Go to this website for a list of San Francisco Visa services approved by the consulate:San Francisco Visa Services Note: The applicant’s passport may be returned by mail if the applicant or his/representative leaves a self addressed pre-paid envelope from the U.S. Postal Service (Express Mail only) at the moment the application is delivered at the Consulate.
Note: Make all US Postal money orders payable to Brazilian Consulate.
Note: Drop off and pick up is from 09:00 to 13:00 daily first come first serve.
Note: The turn around time for visas is 5 business days or more.
Brazilian Embassy in Washington, D.C.
Consular Service
3009 Whitehaven St., N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20008
Fax: (202) 238-2818
E-mail: consular@brasilemb.org
Website:http://www.brasilemb.org
Jurisdiction: District of Columbia, States of Kentucky, Maryland, Ohio, Virginia, and West Virginia
Note: Open to the public 8:00 am to 12:30 pm and 2:00 pm to 4:00 pm.
Note: The Washington Consulate of Brazil will not accept deliveries from FedEx. You must use the US postal service on both ends of the process.
Note: All US Postal money orders are to be made out to The Brazilian Embassy
8484 Wilshire Blvd., suites 711/730
Beverly Hills, CA 90211
Phone: (323) 651-2664
Fax: (323) 651-1274
E-mail: info@brazilian-consulate.org
Website:http://www.brazilian-consulate.org
Jurisdiction: States of Arizona, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Utah, Wyoming, and in the State of California, the counties of Imperial, Kern, Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, and Ventura.
Note: The Los Angeles Consulate of Brazil does not accept visa application by Mail. You must drop it off in person or use a visa service. Here is a link to LA visa services that the consulate recommends using:
http://www.brazilian-consulate.org/files.php?id=151
Note: Drop off times are from 09:00 to 12:00 PST and pick times are 12:00 to 13:00 PST Turn around time is 10 business days.
Note:Requires a copy of your driver's license or copy of a utility bill in your name.
Note: All money orders should be made payable to: Consulate General of Brazil.
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