The Brasília market, in depth
Brasília is the low-volatility, buy-and-hold market in Brazil. The federal government and its salaries underwrite the entire rental economy: tenants are stable, pay on time, and prime-quadra vacancy is the lowest among major Brazilian cities. It is also the safest large city in the country by most measures. The trade-off is that there is essentially no short-stay story — Brasília is a long-term-lease market for civil servants, embassy staff and the diplomatic community, not an Airbnb market. UNESCO-listed modernist urbanism makes the address distinctive but the buying logic is pure cash-flow stability.
The one-line version.
Brasília is the boring-in-a-good-way market. Government salaries underwrite the rental market; vacancy is the lowest among Brazil's major cities. Asa Sul and Lago Sul attract embassy staff and senior civil servants. Short-term yields are weak — this is a buy-and-hold play, not an Airbnb play.
Best fit for
Long-term rentals, civil-servant tenants, low-maintenance landlords.
The income side
Gross yields run about 6.4% long-term and 7.1% short-term. Net depends on local operating costs — see the Brasília cost-of-living guide before you underwrite a purchase.
FAQ — Brasília edition
Can a non-resident foreigner buy in Brasília?
Yes. Brazil places no residency requirement on residential property purchases. You'll need a CPF (Brazilian tax ID) and a registered FX operation when wiring funds. See our CPF guide.
Do I have to be in Brasília to close?
No. Brazilian law allows closing by power of attorney (procuração) granted at any Brazilian consulate. Most foreign buyers we work with close remotely.
What's the total cost on top of the purchase price?
Budget 4–6% all-in: ITBI (2–3%), cartório registration (1–2%), attorney (1–1.5%). On a $500K purchase, $20K–$30K. See the tax guide.
Can Brasília property qualify for the investor visa?
Yes — the Brazilian investor visa requires ~$200K USD in real estate. Most residential Brasília property at that price point qualifies. See the visa guide.
Can I get a Brazilian mortgage as a foreigner?
Rarely. Most foreigners pay cash or finance through home-country instruments (HELOC, lombard). See financing options.