Moving from New Zealand to Brazil
A container run from Auckland or Tauranga across the Pacific or via Asia to Santos, Brazil's largest port and the gateway to Sao Paulo. Here is the honest brief on shipping costs, how the used goods relief works through Brazilian customs, the realistic visa routes for a Kiwi, and a timeline you can plan around.
Bring your used goods in tax free with the right visa and a certified inventory.
Moving from New Zealand to Brazil is a long ocean haul. Containers leave Auckland or Tauranga and reach Santos, the port that serves Sao Paulo and handles most of Brazil's household shipments, either across the Pacific and around South America or routed via Asia and the Atlantic. From Santos it is a short road haul up to Sao Paulo or on to Rio de Janeiro. A realistic door to door window is six to nine weeks.
Brazil lets a person arriving to live bring used household goods, the bagagem, free of import tax, but the paperwork is strict. You need a permanent or temporary visa and the national migration registration, and your inventory must be certified by a Brazilian consulate before the goods sail. Customs clearance runs through the Federal Revenue, the Receita Federal, and a licensed despachante handles the declaration at Santos.
Prices below are in New Zealand dollars and indicative for 2026. Brazil uses the real, so plan your local budget in reais. The real number turns on volume, whether you share a container or take a full one, and the inland delivery from Santos.
What it costs in 2026, by home size.
Your bill is driven by volume, whether you share or take a full container, and the inland delivery from Santos. The figures below are indicative ranges for 2026, door to door.
Indicative 2026 ranges in New Zealand dollars, door to door by sea from Auckland or Tauranga to the port of Santos in Brazil. Volume, season, the sailing and inland delivery to Sao Paulo or Rio move the figure. The Southern Hemisphere summer is the peak.
- +Best value for a studio or a partial home
- +You pay only for the space you use
- −Slower, because your goods wait for a consolidated load
- +Faster and sealed from your door
- +The sensible choice for a full house
- −You pay for the whole box even if you do not fill it
- +Fastest way to get essentials over
- +Useful while your container is at sea
- −Rarely sensible for a full household
Get moving quotes for New Zealand to Brazil.
Tell us your size and timing. We pass your request to vetted movers who run the route from New Zealand into Brazil, and you compare them on your own terms.
A realistic schedule for this route.
Working back from the day your container leaves New Zealand, here is a realistic schedule for this move to Brazil.
Secure your visa and migration registration
Apply for the permanent or temporary visa that fits you, because the tax free bagagem relief is only open to people arriving to live. The visa anchors everything that follows.
Get surveys and quotes
Have movers run a video or in home survey for an accurate volume and a binding price. Confirm they ship from Auckland or Tauranga to Santos and work with a licensed despachante.
Certify the inventory at the consulate
Prepare your detailed inventory in Portuguese and have it certified by a Brazilian consulate before the goods sail. This consular step is the heart of a clean clearance.
The ocean leg
The container sails for roughly six to nine weeks. Use the window to arrange housing and to obtain your taxpayer number, the CPF, which you will need on arrival.
Clear customs and deliver
Your despachante lodges the bagagem desacompanhada declaration with the Receita Federal at Santos, and once approved your goods are delivered to Sao Paulo, Rio or wherever you settle.
Clearing your goods into Brazil.
Brazil clears household goods through the Federal Revenue, the Receita Federal, normally at the port of Santos. The relief is the bagagem desacompanhada, the unaccompanied baggage regime, which admits used personal and household effects free of import tax for a person arriving to take up residence, provided you hold a permanent or temporary visa and the national migration registration.
The defining requirement is the inventory. You prepare a detailed list of your goods in Portuguese, with values, and have it certified by a Brazilian consulate before the shipment sails. On arrival your licensed despachante presents that certified inventory, your passport and visa, the migration registration, your taxpayer number, the CPF, and the bill of lading. The goods must be used and consistent with a normal household, and the shipment should arrive within the window allowed around your own entry into Brazil.
Vehicles cannot come in under the baggage relief, so plan to buy a car locally. New or commercial quantities of any item fall outside the relief and attract tax, so honest used valuations matter. After arrival you complete your registration with the Federal Police, who issue the national migration card, the CRNM.
The routes in for this corridor.
A New Zealander needs a residence basis to settle in Brazil and to unlock the tax free bagagem relief on the goods. Brazil offers several routes, each leading to a residence authorisation and the national migration card, the CRNM, issued by the Federal Police.
A Brazilian employer sponsors a work residence authorisation, the most common route for a working age mover. Specialist and intra company transfer categories exist.
Brazil offers a residence permit for remote workers employed by a foreign company who can show a minimum monthly income. It suits location independent Kiwis.
Marriage to or a stable union with a Brazilian, or close family ties, supports a family based residence authorisation. This is a common and durable route.
Retirees with a qualifying pension income, and investors who put capital into property or a business, can apply for residence under the relevant means tested or investment categories.
How to pick a mover for this route, without the guesswork.
We do not rank or recommend individual companies. We teach you the criteria that separate a safe international move from an expensive mistake, then put your request in front of vetted movers who run this lane.
Check the trade affiliation. Membership of FIDI or IAM signals a mover is financially screened and bound to industry standards for international household goods, which matters on a long lane like New Zealand to Brazil.
Insist on a binding pre move survey. A real video or in home survey of your volume is the only honest basis for a price. A quote given without one is a guess that tends to grow on moving day.
Compare like for like. Read what each quote includes: export packing, the ocean freight, destination clearance at Santos, the consular inventory handling, inland delivery to Sao Paulo or Rio, and insurance. The cheapest headline number is rarely the cheapest move.
Understand the insurance terms. Over six to nine weeks at sea, full replacement value cover matters. Ask whether cover is full value or depreciated, what the excess is, and how claims are handled.
Read recent reviews for this corridor. Look for verified reviews that mention New Zealand to Brazil and clearance through Santos.
Questions people ask about this move.
How much does it cost to move from New Zealand to Brazil?
For a two to three bedroom home by sea, plan on roughly NZ$14,000 to 35,000 door to door in 2026, depending on volume and whether you share a container or take a full one. A studio is less and a four bedroom home more. These are indicative ranges, not a quote.
How long does shipping take from New Zealand to Brazil?
Door to door is usually about six to nine weeks. The container sails across the Pacific or via Asia and the Atlantic to Santos, then road delivery and customs clearance add the rest.
Do I pay duty on my furniture moving to Brazil?
Usually not. Under the unaccompanied baggage relief, a person arriving to live with a permanent or temporary visa can bring used household goods free of import tax, provided the inventory is certified by a Brazilian consulate before shipping. You clear through the Receita Federal.
Do I need a visa to move from New Zealand to Brazil?
Yes. As a non Brazilian you need a permanent or temporary visa, on work, remote work, family, retirement or investment grounds, plus the national migration registration. Confirm the current routes with the Brazilian authorities.
Why does my inventory need a consulate stamp?
Brazil requires the inventory for your unaccompanied baggage to be certified by a Brazilian consulate before the goods sail. The certified list is what your despachante presents to customs at Santos, so it is central to a tax free clearance.
Can I bring my car from New Zealand to Brazil?
No. Vehicles cannot enter under the household goods relief, so plan to buy a car locally. Confirm the rules before you make any shipping decision.