Our Expert in Brazil
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Last updated: 21 May 2026
Understanding how to get merger approval in Brazil is a non-negotiable step for any deal team planning an acquisition, joint venture, or corporate restructuring that touches the Brazilian market. Brazil operates a mandatory, pre-merger, suspensory merger control regime administered by CADE (Conselho Administrativo de Defesa Econômica), which means that transactions meeting the statutory turnover thresholds must be notified and cleared before the parties may close. With a fixed filing fee of BRL 85,000, statutory review windows that range from roughly 30 days to 330 days, and increasingly aggressive enforcement against gun-jumping, the Brazilian filing process demands careful planning from signing through to closing.
Brazil’s merger control regime, established by Law No. 12.529/2011, applies to any transaction that results in an economic concentration, mergers, acquisitions of control, joint ventures, and certain minority stake purchases, provided the parties meet the turnover thresholds set out in Article 88 of the Law. The regime is suspensory: the parties cannot close the transaction until CADE issues its clearance decision.
Before assembling a filing packet, every deal team should run through two threshold questions:
If both conditions are satisfied, filing is mandatory. A foreign private-equity fund acquiring a Brazilian logistics company where the fund’s portfolio companies jointly generate BRL 800 million in Brazilian revenue and the target generates BRL 90 million would, for example, clearly trigger the filing obligation.
The merger control thresholds in Brazil are structured as a cumulative, two-limb turnover test under Article 88 of Law No. 12.529/2011. Both limbs must be met simultaneously for a CADE merger notification to be required.
The first limb requires that at least one of the economic groups involved in the transaction recorded annual gross revenue or turnover in Brazil of at least BRL 750 million in the fiscal year preceding the transaction. The second limb requires that at least one other economic group involved recorded annual gross revenue or turnover in Brazil of at least BRL 75 million in the same period.
Revenue is calculated on an economic-group basis, which means it encompasses all entities under common control, parent companies, subsidiaries, and affiliates, not just the direct buyer or seller. For investment funds, CADE’s updated FAQ guidance clarifies that portfolio companies under common control may be aggregated when calculating the group’s turnover.
Even where turnover thresholds are met, the transaction must also have actual or potential effects in Brazil. This is particularly relevant for offshore-to-offshore deals involving global companies. Industry observers note that CADE has historically interpreted this requirement broadly, but there remains limited formal guidance on how “potential effects” are assessed in borderline cases.
| Threshold Test | What It Measures | Example / Note |
|---|---|---|
| Size‑of‑parties, Limb 1 (BRL 750 million) | Annual gross revenue in Brazil of at least one economic group | Acquirer’s Brazilian subsidiaries collectively earn BRL 800 million, Limb 1 is met |
| Size‑of‑parties, Limb 2 (BRL 75 million) | Annual gross revenue in Brazil of at least one other economic group | Target earns BRL 90 million in Brazil, Limb 2 is met |
| Effects in Brazil | Whether the transaction has actual or potential competitive effects in the Brazilian market | Global deal with no Brazilian customers or competitors may fall outside the obligation, even if turnover thresholds are technically met |
CADE may also, in exceptional circumstances, require notification of a transaction that falls below the turnover thresholds if it determines that the transaction is capable of producing significant competitive effects in Brazil. This discretionary power is used sparingly but keeps an element of unpredictability for borderline transactions.
The merger filing fee in Brazil is a flat BRL 85,000, payable by the filing parties prior to CADE’s assessment of the transaction. This fee is the same regardless of whether the case qualifies for fast-track review or proceeds to a full, in-depth analysis. It does not vary by transaction value or the number of overlapping markets.
Key practical points on the fee:
A complete CADE merger notification must contain detailed information about the parties, the transaction structure, and the relevant markets. Incomplete filings are a common cause of delay: CADE will not formally accept (and the review clock will not start running on) a filing until all required information and documents are provided.
The most frequent causes of CADE returning a filing as incomplete include:
Foreign entities filing with CADE do not need to establish a Brazilian subsidiary or obtain a CNPJ (Cadastro Nacional da Pessoa Jurídica) solely for the purpose of the filing. However, they must appoint Brazilian legal counsel who will serve as the official representative before CADE. Local counsel will manage the filing, handle requests for information, and receive CADE communications on behalf of the foreign party.
CADE’s review process operates in distinct phases, and the total time to clearance varies dramatically depending on whether the transaction qualifies for the fast-track procedure or is subjected to a full, in-depth review.
The vast majority of transactions notified to CADE are reviewed and cleared under the fast-track (rito sumário) procedure, handled by CADE’s General Superintendence (SG). Under CADE’s Resolution No. 16/2016, the SG’s decision on fast-track cases should be issued within 30 days of filing acceptance or the most recent amendment. In practice, straightforward cases are frequently cleared within this window.
Transactions that raise potential competitive concerns, significant horizontal overlaps, vertical integration in concentrated markets, or novel market structures, may be referred to the ordinary procedure. The SG conducts a more detailed investigation and issues an opinion, which is then submitted to CADE’s Administrative Tribunal for a final decision. The statutory review period under the ordinary procedure is 240 days from filing acceptance, extendable by up to 90 additional days upon request by the parties or by CADE itself, for a maximum total of 330 days.
| Review Stage | Statutory / Target Window | Practical Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Completeness check (filing acceptance) | No fixed deadline, typically 5–15 business days | Clock starts only once CADE formally accepts the filing as complete |
| Fast-track review (SG decision) | 30 days from acceptance/amendment | Most transactions are cleared at this stage; includes straightforward cases with low market overlap |
| Ordinary procedure, SG investigation | Part of the 240-day statutory window | SG issues a detailed opinion (approval, conditions, or recommendation to block) |
| Tribunal decision (ordinary procedure) | Within the 240-day window (extendable to 330 days) | Tribunal may hold hearings, request further information, or negotiate remedies |
Early indications from recent CADE activity suggest that the authority’s caseload continues to grow, 873 transactions were submitted for review in 2025 alone, yet average review times for fast-track cases have remained broadly consistent. Deal teams should nevertheless build a conservative buffer into their closing timelines, particularly for transactions in sectors where CADE has historically shown closer scrutiny, such as healthcare, financial services, and technology.
Gun-jumping is one of the most serious compliance risks in Brazilian merger control. It occurs when the parties to a notifiable transaction implement the transaction or engage in coordinated competitive conduct before obtaining CADE clearance. Under Article 88, §3 of Law No. 12.529/2011, consummation of a notifiable merger before CADE approval is prohibited and can trigger severe penalties.
CADE’s published gun-jumping guideline distinguishes between two broad categories of prohibited conduct:
CADE has imposed substantial fines for gun-jumping violations. In a widely cited case, CADE imposed a BRL 3 million fine against OGX for consummating a transaction before receiving clearance. The authority’s guideline notes that penalties for gun-jumping can include fines ranging from BRL 60,000 to BRL 60 million, plus a daily penalty for continuing non-compliance, and CADE retains the power to declare the transaction null and void.
Deal teams should implement the following safeguards from the moment a transaction is signed:
This article provides general information and does not constitute legal advice. Deal teams should engage qualified Brazilian competition counsel for transaction-specific guidance on gun-jumping compliance.
At the conclusion of its review, CADE may reach one of three outcomes:
Where CADE imposes conditions, non-compliance can result in additional penalties, including fines calculated under the framework established by CADE Resolution 24/2019, which sets parameters for pecuniary sanctions based on the severity and duration of the violation.
The following numbered checklist summarises the key stages for obtaining merger approval in Brazil:
For assistance navigating CADE filings, deal teams can find an M&A lawyer through the Global Law Experts directory.
Understanding how to get merger approval in Brazil comes down to disciplined preparation: confirm the filing obligation early, assemble a thorough notification packet, pay the BRL 85,000 fee, and respect the suspensory nature of the regime by avoiding any conduct that could be characterised as gun-jumping. With merger timelines in Brazil ranging from approximately 30 days for straightforward fast-track cases to up to 330 days for complex reviews, deal teams that invest in thorough upfront preparation, and engage experienced Brazilian competition counsel, will be best positioned to secure clearance efficiently and protect the transaction’s closing timeline.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Leonardo Theon de Moraes at TM Associados, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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