Labor Law in Brazil: A Practical Guide

Labor law in Brazil

06 de março de 2026

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Brazil is the largest labour market in Latin America, with over 47 million formal employment relationships governed by one of the most protective — and, for the uninitiated, most costly — labour codes in the world, the framework of the Labor Law in Brazil: The Consolidação das Leis do Trabalho (CLT), in force since 1943 and substantially reformed in 2017, creates a legal environment that surprises most foreign employers: termination costs are high and precisely calculated, employment status disputes are litigated in a specialised court system that processes over five million new cases per year, and statutory protections apply regardless of any contractual provisions to the contrary.

This guide provides a systematic overview of Brazilian labor law for foreign employers, investors and in-house counsel who need a reliable foundation before establishing or acquiring operations in Brazil. It covers the legal framework, employment contracts, working time and benefits, the real cost of dismissal, collective bargaining, outsourcing, labour litigation and the key risks that due diligence must address. Where relevant, it draws comparisons with German and British employment law to orient practitioners from civil law and common law backgrounds alike.

The analysis reflects the law as in force in March 2026, incorporating the changes introduced by the Labour Reform (Reforma Trabalhista, Lei 13.467/2017) and subsequent legislation.

Contents

  1. The Legal Foundation — the CLT and the Brazilian Labour System
  2. Employment Contracts — Types, Formation and Mandatory Provisions
  3. Working Hours, Overtime and Statutory Benefits
  4. Termination and Severance — The Real Cost of Dismissal
  5. Collective Bargaining and Trade Unions
  6. Outsourcing and Independent Contractors
  7. The Justiça do Trabalho — Labour Litigation in Practice
  8. Key Risks and Practical Checklist for Foreign Employers
  9. Frequently Asked Questions

1. The Legal Foundation — the CLT and the Brazilian Labour System

The CLT as a Labour Constitution

Brazilian labour law is built upon a single, comprehensive statute: the Consolidação das Leis do Trabalho (CLT), enacted by Decree-Law 5.452/1943 and substantially modernised by the Labour Reform of 2017. The CLT regulates virtually every aspect of the individual employment relationship — contract formation, working hours, overtime, vacation entitlements, notice periods, termination procedures and severance payments — in a level of detail that has no precise equivalent in the labour codes of Germany or the United Kingdom.

Above the CLT in the hierarchy of norms sits the Federal Constitution of 1988, whose Article 7 enshrines a catalogue of fundamental labour rights, including a minimum wage adjusted annually, a maximum eight-hour working day and forty-four-hour working week, paid annual vacation with a one-third premium, maternity leave of 120 days, paternity leave, FGTS entitlement and protection against arbitrary dismissal. These constitutional guarantees apply to all employment relationships and cannot be waived by contract or collective bargaining.

Below the CLT, the hierarchy runs through: collective bargaining agreements negotiated between trade unions (acordos coletivos and convenções coletivas); individual employment contracts; and internal employer regulations. The 2017 Labour Reform introduced the principle of negociado sobre o legislado — negotiated over legislated — allowing collective agreements to modify certain statutory provisions. However, this flexibility operates within constitutional limits: fundamental rights guaranteed by Article 7 of the Constitution cannot be reduced even by collective bargaining.

The Principle of Worker Protection

The interpretive keystone of Brazilian labour law is the principle of protection of the economically weaker party (princípio da proteção ao hipossuficiente). When a statutory provision or contractual clause is ambiguous, Brazilian labour courts apply the interpretation most favourable to the employee. This principle, rooted in the structural inequality of the employment relationship, means that contract drafting for Brazilian operations requires considerably greater precision than in comparable common law jurisdictions, where courts apply objective textual interpretation.

Comparative Perspective — CLT, KSchG and the Employment Rights Act

A German or British employment lawyer approaching Brazilian law will notice both similarities and fundamental differences. Like Germany’s Kündigungsschutzgesetz (KSchG) and the UK’s Employment Rights Act 1996, the CLT requires substantive justification for dismissal and provides for severance payments. However, the CLT’s mandatory severance structure — particularly the FGTS penalty system — generates termination costs that are structurally higher than in most European jurisdictions. Unlike Germany’s dual-channel system of individual labour law and collective Betriebsverfassungsrecht, Brazil concentrates both individual and collective labour rules in the CLT. And unlike the UK, where most employment rights apply only after a qualifying period, Brazilian workers are protected from the first day of employment.

2. Employment Contracts — Types, Formation and Mandatory Provisions

The Open-Ended Contract as the Default

Brazilian law presumes that every employment relationship is governed by an open-ended contract of indefinite duration (contrato por prazo indeterminado). Fixed-term contracts (contratos por prazo determinado) are an exception and are valid only in narrowly defined circumstances: where the nature of the services or the business activity is transitory, or where the contract is a probationary agreement. Fixed-term contracts are limited to two years and may be renewed once, provided the total duration does not exceed two years.

The Probationary Period

The probationary contract (contrato de experiência) is the standard mechanism for evaluating new employees. It may last up to 90 days and may be renewed once within that period. During the probationary period, termination by either party does not trigger full severance entitlements — unless the employer terminates without just cause, in which case compensation equivalent to half the remaining contract period is owed. At the end of the probationary period, if the employment continues, the relationship automatically converts to an open-ended contract.

Mandatory Contract Provisions

Although employment contracts need not be in writing under Brazilian law — the CLT recognises verbal contracts — written contracts are strongly advisable and are standard practice. A well-drafted Brazilian employment contract should address: the employee’s position and job description; salary and remuneration structure; workplace location; working hours regime; confidentiality obligations; and any special arrangements regarding remote work or travel. The employment must also be registered in the employee’s Carteira de Trabalho e Previdência Social (CTPS), the official work record document.

Remote Work — Post-2022 Framework

Remote work (teletrabalho) was introduced into the CLT by the 2017 Reform and further regulated by Lei 14.442/2022. The current framework requires a written addendum to the employment contract specifying the remote work arrangement, the allocation of costs for infrastructure and equipment, and the health and safety obligations of both parties. Remote work does not exempt the employer from compliance with working time rules unless the arrangement is genuinely incompatible with time control — a threshold that Brazilian courts have interpreted restrictively, as illustrated by the TST’s 2025 binding precedent on external workers discussed in section 3.

Intermittent Work

The 2017 Reform created a new contract modality: intermittent work (trabalho intermitente), under which the employee is called to work on an as-needed basis and is remunerated only for the hours actually worked. Intermittent workers are entitled to proportional vacation, thirteenth salary and FGTS on the amounts actually received. This modality was designed to formalise flexible working arrangements that had previously operated in the informal economy, and it remains subject to ongoing legal debate and union challenges.

3. Working Hours, Overtime and Statutory Benefits

Standard Working Hours

Article 7, XIII of the Federal Constitution establishes the maximum working day at eight hours and the maximum working week at forty-four hours. The CLT provides for a mandatory rest interval of at least one hour (and no more than two hours) for shifts exceeding six hours, and a minimum eleven-hour rest period between the end of one shift and the beginning of the next. Employees are entitled to one full day of rest per week (descanso semanal remunerado), preferably on Sundays.

Overtime

Hours worked in excess of the standard daily limit must be compensated at a minimum premium of 50% above the regular hourly rate (Art. 7, XVI, Constitution). Collective bargaining agreements may increase this rate. An alternative to overtime payment is the banco de horas (time bank) system, which permits extra hours to be compensated with equivalent rest rather than payment, provided it is established by collective or individual written agreement and the time bank is settled within six months (or twelve months if established by collective bargaining agreement).

A significant development in 2025 is the TST’s binding precedent establishing that the burden of proving the impossibility of monitoring external workers’ hours rests with the employer. As analysed in detail on the Barbieri Advogados labour blog, companies with field sales forces, delivery networks and external technical teams must now review their time-tracking practices or face substantial overtime liability across their entire external workforce.

Mandatory Benefits

Beyond salary, Brazilian employers are required to provide a series of statutory benefits whose aggregate cost substantially exceeds the nominal payroll figure. The principal mandatory items are set out in the table below.

BenefitLegal BasisEmployer Cost
FGTS (Severance Fund)Lei 8.036/19908% of gross monthly remuneration
Social Security (INSS)Lei 8.212/199120% of gross payroll (general regime)
Annual vacationCLT Art. 12930 days + one-third premium
Thirteenth salary (décimo terceiro)Lei 4.090/1962One additional monthly salary per year
Transport voucher (vale-transporte)Lei 7.418/1985Employer pays the portion exceeding 6% of salary
Maternity leaveCF Art. 7, XVIII120 days (paid by Social Security, reimbursed to employer)
Paternity leaveCF Art. 7, XIX5 days (20 days for enrolled companies)

In practice, the total cost of an employee to a Brazilian employer — factoring in FGTS, INSS, vacation provision, thirteenth salary and other mandatory charges — typically reaches 70–80% above the nominal gross salary. An employee with a monthly salary of BRL 10,000 represents a total monthly cost to the employer of approximately BRL 17,000–18,000, before voluntary benefits such as health insurance and meal vouchers, which are market-standard in urban Brazil and effectively mandatory for competitive recruitment.

For a detailed analysis of annual leave rights under the CLT, including the vacation fractionation rules introduced by the 2017 Reform, see our dedicated guide.

4. Termination and Severance — The Real Cost of Dismissal

Termination costs represent the most significant financial surprise for foreign employers entering the Brazilian market. Unlike Germany, where the Kündigungsschutzgesetz focuses primarily on procedural and substantive requirements for valid dismissal, or the UK, where unfair dismissal compensation is assessed by tribunals case by case, Brazil’s CLT establishes a precise and mandatory severance formula that applies to every dismissal without just cause, regardless of the employer’s financial situation or the employee’s performance history.

Grounds for Dismissal

Brazilian law recognises four termination modalities:

Dismissal without just cause (dispensa sem justa causa) is the most common form of termination. The employer is not required to provide substantive justification but must pay the full severance package described below. This distinguishes Brazil from Germany, where the KSchG requires a socially justified reason for dismissal in companies with more than ten employees.

Dismissal for just cause (dispensa por justa causa) is available only in cases expressly listed in Article 482 of the CLT, which includes dishonesty, habitual insubordination, abandonment of employment, criminal conviction and certain other specified conduct. Just cause dismissal eliminates entitlement to notice pay and the 40% FGTS penalty — but it requires precise factual evidence, and Brazilian courts scrutinise just cause dismissals rigorously. A failed just cause dismissal is converted into dismissal without just cause, with full severance liability plus potential damages.

Constructive dismissal (rescisão indireta) allows the employee to terminate the contract and receive full severance when the employer commits a serious breach — such as failure to pay salary, reduction of salary without legal basis, requiring the employee to perform hazardous work not agreed in the contract, or creating conditions that seriously compromise the employee’s dignity or health.

Mutual termination (distrato), introduced by the 2017 Reform, allows employer and employee to agree to terminate the contract, with reduced severance: the employee receives half the notice period indemnity, half the 40% FGTS penalty (i.e., 20%), and retains access to the FGTS balance. The employee is not entitled to unemployment insurance (seguro-desemprego) following mutual termination.

The Severance Package — Calculation and Cost

On dismissal without just cause, the employer must pay the following items:

Severance ComponentBasis of Calculation
Balance of salary for days worked in the final monthPro rata daily salary
Proportional vacation + one-third premiumMonths worked in current accrual period ÷ 12 × 30 days salary × 4/3
Accrued vacation not yet taken + one-third premiumFull 30 days salary × 4/3
Proportional thirteenth salaryMonths worked in current year ÷ 12 × one monthly salary
Notice period indemnity or served notice30 days + 3 days per year of service, maximum 90 days
FGTS balance withdrawalAccumulated 8% monthly deposits
40% FGTS penalty40% of the total FGTS balance deposited during the employment

Practical Example

Consider an employee with a monthly salary of BRL 8,000 and three years of service, dismissed without just cause in the tenth month of the third year of employment:

ComponentAmount (BRL)
Balance of salary (assuming 20 working days)5,333
Proportional vacation (10/12) + one-third premium8,889
Proportional thirteenth salary (10/12)6,667
Notice period indemnity (39 days)10,400
FGTS balance (3 years × 8% × BRL 8,000 × 12)23,040
40% FGTS penalty9,216
Total severance≈ BRL 63,545

This total — approximately eight months of gross salary for three years of service — illustrates why labour contingency planning is indispensable for any foreign employer operating in Brazil. In Germany, the KSchG does not mandate severance for dismissals with substantive justification, and social plan payments are negotiated case by case. In the UK, statutory redundancy pay is capped and significantly lower. Brazil’s mandatory severance structure has no precise European equivalent.

Protected Employees — Restrictions on Dismissal

Certain categories of employees enjoy provisional employment stability (estabilidade provisória) and may not be dismissed without just cause during the protection period, which varies by category. The most significant protection periods include: pregnancy — from confirmation of pregnancy until five months after birth; work-related illness or accident — twelve months after the INSS benefit ceases; union representative — from candidacy until one year after end of mandate; and CIPA (Internal Accident Prevention Commission) representative — from election until one year after end of mandate. Dismissal of a protected employee without just cause is void, and the employee is entitled to reinstatement or, if reinstatement is refused, compensation equivalent to the entire protection period.

5. Collective Bargaining and Trade Unions

The Brazilian Union System

Brazil operates under a system of compulsory trade union organisation based on professional category and geographic area, known as unicidade sindical: only one union may represent workers of a given category within a given geographic territory. This differs fundamentally from the voluntary, pluralist union systems of Germany and the UK. In practice, it means that when a foreign employer establishes operations in Brazil, there is a pre-existing union with jurisdiction over its employees’ professional category, and engagement with that union is not optional.

Trade unions negotiate acordos coletivos de trabalho (collective agreements between a single employer and the relevant union) and convenções coletivas de trabalho (sector-wide agreements between employer associations and unions). These agreements are typically renewed annually and establish sector-specific wage floors, annual salary adjustments, and supplementary benefits. For foreign employers, understanding the applicable collective agreement is an essential step before establishing the payroll structure.

The 2017 Reform and the “Negotiated Over Legislated” Principle

One of the most significant structural changes introduced by Lei 13.467/2017 was the formalisation of the negociado sobre o legislado principle: collective bargaining agreements may now modify certain statutory provisions, including working time arrangements, overtime bank systems, meal interval duration, remote work rules, and the profit-sharing formula. However, Article 611-B of the CLT establishes a list of rights that collective bargaining may not reduce, including the minimum wage, FGTS, paid vacation and maternity/paternity leave.

For foreign employers, this means that collective agreements can provide a degree of operational flexibility unavailable under the statutory default — but only within precisely defined limits, and only through a process of genuine negotiation with the relevant union. Agreements that are demonstrably the product of coercion or that infringe constitutional rights remain voidable.

For a detailed analysis of the changes introduced by the 2017 Labour Reform to specific rights such as vacation fractionation, see our dedicated article.

6. Outsourcing and Independent Contractors

Post-2017 Outsourcing Framework

Prior to 2017, Brazilian case law — consolidated in TST Precedent 331 — restricted outsourcing to ancillary activities and prohibited the direct outsourcing of the contracting company’s core business (atividade-fim). Lei 13.429/2017 removed this restriction entirely: outsourcing is now permissible for any activity, including core operations. This change significantly expanded the flexibility available to foreign employers structuring their Brazilian operations.

However, the liberalisation of outsourcing does not eliminate employer risk. Article 5-A, §5 of Lei 13.429/2017 provides that the contracting company bears subsidiary liability for the labour and social security obligations of the service provider towards the latter’s employees. If the provider fails to pay FGTS deposits, social security contributions or severance, the contracting company may be compelled to cover these amounts. Effective risk management therefore requires: rigorous due diligence on prospective service providers; contractual indemnification clauses; and ongoing monitoring of the provider’s compliance with its payroll obligations.

The Risk of Employment Relationship Recognition

Brazilian courts will look beyond the contractual label to assess whether an arrangement that purports to be a service contract or independent contractor relationship is in substance an employment relationship. The four defining elements of employment under Article 3 of the CLT are: personal service (pessoalidade); subordination (subordinação); continuity (não-eventualidade); and remuneration (onerosidade). If all four elements are present, the relationship will be characterised as employment regardless of the contract’s denomination, and the contracting party will be exposed to all accrued severance, FGTS and social security obligations, plus fines.

This risk is particularly acute for multinational companies that engage Brazilian individuals through foreign entities, that characterise Brazilian managers as “independent consultants”, or that use platform-based engagement models. The UK’s IR35 framework and Germany’s Scheinselbständigkeit rules address similar concerns, but the Brazilian test is applied with particular rigour by the Justiça do Trabalho.

Platform Workers

Brazil is in the process of regulating the employment status of platform workers, particularly delivery riders and ride-hailing drivers. As of early 2026, legislation is pending in Congress that would introduce a specific legal regime for platform workers, distinct from both full employment and independent contracting. Foreign companies operating platform-based businesses in Brazil should monitor this legislative development closely, as it will directly affect their operational and compliance costs.

7. The Justiça do Trabalho — Labour Litigation in Practice

A Specialised Court System

Brazil maintains a dedicated federal judiciary for labour disputes: the Justiça do Trabalho, organised in three tiers — the Varas do Trabalho (first instance), the Regional Labour Courts (Tribunais Regionais do Trabalho — TRTs) and the Superior Labour Court (Tribunal Superior do Trabalho — TST) in Brasília. This system has no precise equivalent in Germany, where most labour disputes are resolved by the specialised Arbeitsgericht system, or in the UK, where employment tribunals operate within the civil judiciary.

The volume of labour litigation in Brazil is substantial: the Justiça do Trabalho receives approximately five to six million new cases annually. The specialised system and the pro-employee interpretive tradition mean that former employees are well-informed of their rights and that litigation is accessible — procedural rules are simplified, legal aid is broadly available, and contingency fee arrangements between employees and their lawyers are common and judicially recognised.

Prescription Periods

Labour claims are subject to a dual prescriptive regime under Article 7, XXIX of the Constitution: claims arising during the employment relationship must be brought within five years of the relevant event; claims arising on or after termination must be brought within two years of the date of termination. These periods are not negotiable and begin to run regardless of the employee’s awareness of the claim. For foreign employers, this means that a company acquiring a Brazilian business in a share deal inherits not only existing labour claims but potential exposure for events up to five years prior to the acquisition.

Labour Due Diligence in M&A

Labour contingencies are, in our 30-year experience of Brazilian labour litigation, the most frequently underestimated risk in M&A transactions. A comprehensive labour due diligence must examine: the register of all employees, including their formal status and the consistency of their job descriptions with their actual functions; payroll records for at least the past five years; the existence and current status of all pending labour claims; the applicable collective bargaining agreements and their compliance status; workplace safety records and any notified or pending INSS accident investigations; and the treatment of outsourced service providers and the contracting company’s subsidiary liability exposure. For further analysis of this topic in the M&A context, see the Barbieri Advogados labour practice resources.

8. Key Risks and Practical Checklist for Foreign Employers

The following seven risk areas represent the most common — and most costly — compliance failures by foreign employers entering the Brazilian market.

1. Misclassification of employment relationships. Engaging Brazilian individuals as independent contractors, “consultants” or through foreign service agreements does not prevent an employment relationship from being recognised by Brazilian courts if the factual elements of subordination and continuity are present. The four CLT criteria will be applied regardless of the contract’s denomination or governing law.

2. Failure to register the FGTS deposit obligation from the first day of employment. FGTS must be deposited monthly from day one. Late deposits attract interest, fines and, in cases of persistent non-compliance, criminal liability for the company’s directors. The 40% dismissal penalty is calculated on the total historical balance — making early and consistent deposits not just a compliance obligation but a financial planning matter.

3. Ignoring the applicable collective bargaining agreement. The collective agreement for the relevant professional category and geographic area is binding regardless of whether the employer is a party to the negotiations. Failure to apply collective agreement wage floors and benefits creates immediate and retroactive liability.

4. Dismissing a protected employee without just cause. Pregnancy, post-accident stability and union mandate protections are absolute. A dismissal that triggers a protection period — even unknowingly, as in the case of an employee who was pregnant at the time of dismissal but had not yet notified the employer — is void. Reinstatement orders are enforceable and Brazilian courts enforce them.

5. Using just cause dismissal without sufficient evidence. Just cause dismissal requires precise factual evidence of one of the grounds listed in Article 482 of the CLT. Without documented evidence, a just cause dismissal will be converted to dismissal without just cause, with full severance plus potential moral damages.

6. Underestimating outsourcing subsidiary liability. Contracting companies are jointly liable for unpaid labour obligations of their service providers. A payroll failure by a service provider — particularly common in labour-intensive industries such as cleaning, security and logistics — creates immediate exposure for the principal contracting company.

7. Acquiring a Brazilian company without adequate labour due diligence. In a share deal, all historical labour liabilities transfer to the buyer. The five-year prescription period means that exposure predates the acquisition. Escrow provisions, representations and warranties, and price retention mechanisms are essential risk management tools in any Brazilian M&A transaction.

Practical Compliance Checklist

  • Register all employment relationships in the CTPS from the first working day
  • Deposit FGTS at 8% of gross remuneration by the 7th business day of the following month
  • Identify and apply the applicable collective bargaining agreement
  • Establish a written employment contract addressing all mandatory provisions
  • Implement a working time control system for all employees whose hours are controllable
  • Maintain payroll records for a minimum of five years
  • Conduct periodic compliance audits on service providers’ payroll obligations
  • Screen all dismissals for protected status before serving notice
  • In acquisitions, conduct dedicated labour due diligence covering at least five years of history
  • Engage Brazilian-licensed labour counsel before establishing operations, not after the first claim

9. Frequently Asked Questions

What is the CLT and why does it matter for foreign employers in Brazil?

The CLT (Consolidação das Leis do Trabalho, Decree-Law 5.452/1943) is Brazil’s comprehensive labour code, governing virtually all aspects of the employment relationship. For foreign employers, its significance lies in its mandatory character: CLT protections cannot be waived by individual agreement, apply from the first day of employment and are enforced by a dedicated court system. Understanding the CLT is a prerequisite for any business operation involving Brazilian workers.

How much does it cost to dismiss an employee in Brazil?

Dismissal without just cause triggers a mandatory severance package including accrued salary, proportional vacation with one-third premium, proportional thirteenth salary, notice period indemnity (30 to 90 days depending on tenure) and, most significantly, a 40% penalty on the total FGTS balance accumulated during the employment. For a mid-level employee earning BRL 8,000/month with three years of tenure, total severance typically reaches BRL 55,000–65,000 — approximately seven to eight monthly salaries.

What changed with the Brazilian Labour Reform of 2017?

Lei 13.467/2017 introduced significant operational flexibility while preserving the CLT’s core protections. Key changes: collective agreements may now override certain statutory provisions; outsourcing was fully liberalised; a mutual termination mechanism (distrato) was created; remote work was formally regulated; and high-earning employees with university degrees may negotiate certain working conditions directly. These changes created new tools for operational flexibility but did not reduce fundamental constitutional rights.

Can a foreign company be sued in Brazilian labour courts?

Yes. The Justiça do Trabalho has jurisdiction over any employment relationship where services are performed in Brazil, regardless of the employer’s nationality or the governing law chosen in the contract. A foreign parent company may also be held jointly liable for its Brazilian subsidiary’s labour obligations if the group structure is used to frustrate employee rights under the economic group doctrine of Article 2, §2 of the CLT.

Is outsourcing legally permitted in Brazil?

Yes, in full since Lei 13.429/2017. Outsourcing is now permitted for any activity, including core business operations. However, the contracting company retains subsidiary liability for the labour and social security obligations of the service provider. Due diligence on providers, contractual indemnification clauses and ongoing payroll monitoring remain essential risk management tools.

What is the FGTS and how does it work?

The FGTS (Fundo de Garantia do Tempo de Serviço) is a compulsory savings fund into which employers must deposit 8% of each employee’s gross monthly remuneration. On dismissal without just cause, the employee withdraws the accumulated balance and the employer pays an additional 40% penalty on that balance. There is no direct equivalent in German or British employment law, and the FGTS represents one of the most significant and frequently underestimated labour cost items for foreign employers in Brazil.

How does Brazilian labour law compare to German and British law?

Three key differences are most relevant for European employers. First, Brazilian termination costs are structurally higher than in Germany or the UK, driven primarily by the 40% FGTS penalty and mandatory notice indemnity. Second, Brazil maintains a high-volume specialised labour court system that makes litigation accessible to employees and results in a substantially higher claims frequency than in comparable European jurisdictions. Third, while Germany’s Betriebsverfassungsgesetz and the UK’s trade union framework are institutionally more complex, Brazil’s CLT provides broader individual statutory protections that cannot be contracted out at any level.

What are the main labour risks in M&A due diligence in Brazil?

Labour contingencies are the largest risk factor in Brazilian M&A, particularly in share deals where all historical liabilities transfer to the buyer. The five-year prescription period means exposure predates the acquisition by up to five years. Key risk areas: unregistered or misclassified employees, unpaid overtime, collective bargaining non-compliance, occupational health and safety violations and outsourcing subsidiary liability. Professional labour due diligence by experienced Brazilian counsel is indispensable and its cost is invariably lower than the cost of undisclosed contingencies discovered after closing. For more on this topic, see the analysis of workplace accident liability on our site.


Conclusion

Brazilian labor law rewards preparation and penalises improvisation. The CLT’s mandatory structure, the FGTS system, the specialised labour court with its five-million-case annual docket, and the broad pro-employee interpretive tradition create a legal environment that is fundamentally different from those of Germany, the United Kingdom or most other jurisdictions from which foreign investors approach the Brazilian market.

The 2017 Labour Reform introduced meaningful operational flexibility — particularly in outsourcing, collective bargaining and working time management — but did not alter the fundamental architecture of the CLT or reduce the mandatory severance structure. Compliance is not a one-time exercise: Brazilian labour law is dynamic, with regular TST binding precedents reshaping key areas of liability, and the pending platform worker legislation likely to create a new regulatory category in the near term.

For foreign employers, the appropriate response is not to be deterred but to be properly advised. Brazil’s labour market, for all its complexity, is the largest in Latin America and offers access to one of the world’s most dynamic economies. Understanding the framework is the first step to operating within it effectively.

Barbieri Advogados advises foreign employers and investors on all aspects of Brazilian labour law, from employment structuring and contract drafting to labour due diligence in M&A transactions and contentious matters before the Justiça do Trabalho. With thirty years of labour litigation experience and offices in Porto Alegre, São Paulo, Santa Maria, Curitiba, Florianópolis and Stuttgart, the firm provides integrated advice to clients operating across Brazil and across legal systems.


This article has been prepared for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice on any specific matter. The law described reflects the position as at March 2026. For advice on individual circumstances, please consult a lawyer qualified in the relevant jurisdiction.

© 2026 Barbieri Advogados. All rights reserved.

Maurício Lindenmeyer Barbieri

Managing Partner — Barbieri Advogados

Rechtsanwalt (RAK Stuttgart, nº 50.159) | Advogado (OAB Lisboa, nº 64443L) | Advogado (OAB/RS nº 36.798 | DF | SC | PR | SP)

Master of Laws — UFRGS. Former Professor of Labour Procedure — PUCRS and UniRitter. Author of Curso de Direito Processual Trabalhista (Editora LTr, 2009).

E-mail: mauricio.barbieri@barbieriadvogados.com