Visa Guides

Brazil Employment Visa Nepali 2026: Permit & Salary

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Brazil Employment Visa Nepali 2026: Permit & Salary
TL;DR

Nepali passport holders travelling to Brazil on a employment purpose typically apply for the Temporary Visa — Paid Work (VITEM V) (Up to 2 years, renewable inside Brazil; converts to permanent residence after 4 years of continuous work.). Processing runs 15–30 working days AFTER MJSP authorisation arrives at the Embassy (the MJSP step itself takes 30–90 days). Brazilian employer applies for MJSP work permit FIRST → MJSP transmits authorisation to Embassy Kathmandu → applicant submits SCI form + supporting documents at Embassy. Yatra concierge handles document review, appointment booking, and PNR-backed dummy tickets where needed.

Key takeaways

  • Visa class for Nepali employment travel to Brazil: Temporary Visa — Paid Work (VITEM V) (Up to 2 years, renewable inside Brazil; converts to permanent residence after 4 years of continuous work.).
  • Processing time: 15–30 working days AFTER MJSP authorisation arrives at the Embassy (the MJSP step itself takes 30–90 days).. Apply with at least a 1-2 week buffer beyond this window.
  • Fee: NPR-equivalent set by Embassy at submission (typically NPR 18,000–25,000)..
  • Embassy contact: Embassy of Brazil — Kathmandu (direct consular jurisdiction over Nepal) — Chundevi Marg, House no. 155, Maharajgunj, Kathmandu 44600, Nepal · P.O. Box 19299, Kathmandu.
  • Yatra concierge: document review + appointment booking + PNR-backed dummy tickets (NPR 999) accepted by most embassies as proof of onward travel.
For a Brazil employment visa from Nepal, the application file must include a passport with the required validity, photographs to embassy spec, the completed application form, financial proof (3-6 months of bank statements), confirmed flight + hotel bookings, and a employment-purpose letter. The visa class is <strong>Temporary Visa — Paid Work (VITEM V)</strong> (valid up to <strong>Up to 2 years, renewable inside Brazil; converts to permanent residence after 4 years of continuous work.</strong>). Processing typically takes <strong>15–30 working days AFTER MJSP authorisation arrives at the Embassy (the MJSP step itself takes 30–90 days).</strong>. Embassy reviewers reject roughly 30% of files for documentation gaps that a pre-submission review would have caught.

Document checklist and eligibility for the Brazil employment visa

Embassy reviewers in Kathmandu check five things in order on every Nepali file:

  1. Passport with the required validity remaining beyond return and at least 2 blank pages.
  2. Identity proof — Nepali citizenship card or NID copy with the application form.
  3. Financial proof — 3-6 months of bank statements (original, signed and stamped on every page), tax returns where applicable, salary slips.
  4. Travel intent — flight bookings (Yatra dummy ticket NPR 999 if you don't want to commit yet) and hotel reservations covering the full stay.
  5. Employment purpose proof — purpose-specific cover letter signed and dated.

The application is rejected if any one line is missing or unsigned — there is no partial credit.

Quick facts

Visa typeTemporary Visa — Paid Work (VITEM V)
Stay durationUp to 2 years, renewable inside Brazil; converts to permanent residence after 4 years of continuous work.
ValidityAligned with the MJSP work-permit duration on the contract.
EntriesMultiple.
Embassy feeNPR-equivalent set by Embassy at submission (typically NPR 18,000–25,000).
Processing time15–30 working days AFTER MJSP authorisation arrives at the Embassy (the MJSP step itself takes 30–90 days).
Embassy / centreEmbassy of Brazil — Kathmandu (direct consular jurisdiction over Nepal)
Address (Kathmandu)Chundevi Marg, House no. 155, Maharajgunj, Kathmandu 44600, Nepal · P.O. Box 19299, Kathmandu
HoursEmbassy: Mon–Thu 09:00–17:00, Fri 09:00–13:00. Consular Section (visa intake): Mon–Fri 10:00–13:00. Closed on Nepali public holidays + 7 September (Brazilian National Day).
Online portalhttps://formulario-mre.serpro.gov.br (SCI / Sistema Consular Integrado — mandatory online application portal for ALL Brazilian visa categories) · https://www.gov.br/mre/pt-br/assuntos/portal-consular/sistema-e-consular (e-Consular system index) · https://www.gov.br/mre/pt-br/embaixada-katmandu (Embassy of Brazil in Kathmandu — local instructions in English/Portuguese)
Last verified2026-05-05

Important notes for Nepali applicants

  • Every Nepali-language document MUST be accompanied by a notary-certified English translation — embassies will reject untranslated originals. Use a Nepal Bar Council–registered translator and have each translation notarised by a Notary Public.
  • All visa documentation MUST be submitted to the Consular Section in Portuguese, English, or Spanish. Nepali-language documents must be translated and notarised before submission. Bilingual documents (e.g. English/Nepali) may be accepted on case-by-case analysis if the essential information appears in both languages.
  • Nepali ordinary passport holders MUST apply for a paper visa to enter Brazil. Brazil does NOT issue eVisas for Nepal — the eVisa pilot announced in April 2025 covers ONLY tourists from AU/CA/US (no Nepal). Visa-waiver agreements with 90+ countries do NOT include Nepal.
  • The Embassy of Brazil in Kathmandu (Chundevi Marg, Maharajgunj) is the ONLY Brazilian intake and adjudication post for Nepali residents — there is NO VFS partner, NO honorary consulate, and NO courier-only route. Applicants must appear in person for document submission; appointments are booked via email [email protected].
  • Documents issued OUTSIDE Nepal must be Hague-apostilled OR notarised by the Brazilian Consular Section in the country of origin (e.g. for a UK-issued document, get it apostilled by the FCDO Legalisation Office or notarised by Embassy of Brazil in London). Nepal joined the Hague Apostille Convention on 14 March 2024 — Nepal-issued public documents apostilled by Nepal MoFA on/after that date are accepted by Brazil without further legalisation.
  • Yellow Fever vaccination certificate (with International Certificate of Vaccination or Prophylaxis — ICVP) is recommended for ALL travellers and may be requested at the Brazilian border, especially after travel through yellow-fever-risk countries. Nepal is not on the risk list, but stopovers in Africa / South America transit countries trigger the ICVP requirement.

Documents required for the Brazil employment visa

The embassy reviewer in Kathmandu checks the file in this order. Prepare each item to the specification before booking the appointment — the application is non-refundable on rejection.

DocumentRequiredNotes
Passport, photo, signed SCI receiptYes
MJSP Authorisation (Autorização de Residência) — issued to employerYesOriginating from the employer's petition; the Embassy receives a copy from MJSP directly.
Employment contract — signed by both partiesYesIn Portuguese, with CNPJ of employer, salary in BRL, role, duration, and CLT (Consolidação das Leis do Trabalho) compliance clause.
Brazilian employer CNPJ + Junta Comercial extractYes
Diploma + academic transcriptsYesApostilled by Nepal MoFA + Portuguese translation.
Professional licences / registrations (medical, engineering, etc.)RecommendedRequired for regulated professions — must be revalidated in Brazil through the relevant Conselho.
Nepal Police ClearanceYesApostilled.
Medical fitness certificateRecommendedSome sectors (mining, healthcare) require a Brazilian-recognised medical exam.
Proof of accommodation in Brazil (employer-provided or independent)Yes
CV / resume in PortugueseYes

How to apply for the Brazil employment visa from Nepal

Brazilian employer applies for MJSP work permit FIRST → MJSP transmits authorisation to Embassy Kathmandu → applicant submits SCI form + supporting documents at Embassy.

  1. Check eligibility against the criteria above and confirm the visa class is correct for your travel purpose.
  2. Prepare the document file per the table above. Use a Nepal Bar Council-registered translator + notary for any Nepali-language original (employer letter, property docs, citizenship copy back-translation).
  3. Book the appointment at https://formulario-mre.serpro.gov.br (SCI / Sistema Consular Integrado — mandatory online application portal for ALL Brazilian visa categories) · https://www.gov.br/mre/pt-br/assuntos/portal-consular/sistema-e-consular (e-Consular system index) · https://www.gov.br/mre/pt-br/embaixada-katmandu (Embassy of Brazil in Kathmandu — local instructions in English/Portuguese) — slots fill quickly during peak windows.
  4. Submit in person at Embassy of Brazil — Kathmandu (direct consular jurisdiction over Nepal) (Chundevi Marg, House no. 155, Maharajgunj, Kathmandu 44600, Nepal · P.O. Box 19299, Kathmandu). Arrive 15 minutes early.
  5. Pay the fee (Visa fee paid via bank voucher prepared by the Consular Section AFTER document review (not at the time of online form submission). Tourist / Business visa fee: NPR 12,000.00. Bank voucher must be deposited at the bank branch indicated by the Embassy and the original receipt returned with the printed application. Visa fees are NOT refundable, regardless of approval / refusal.).
  6. Provide biometrics if requested (mandatory for sticker classes; e-visa classes typically do not require them).
  7. Track and collect — most embassies provide a tracking reference. E-visas arrive by email; sticker visas return by courier or in-person collection.

What Yatra handles for Brazil employment visa applications

  • Document checklist tailored to the employment purpose — exactly what the Brazil embassy requires for Nepali files in this class.
  • Pre-submission review — we catch the documentation-gap rejections (wrong photo spec, missing translation, weak cover letter) before the file enters the queue.
  • Appointment booking at Embassy of Brazil — Kathmandu (direct consular jurisdiction over Nepal) in Kathmandu.
  • PNR-backed dummy tickets at NPR 999 — accepted by most embassies as proof of onward travel so you can apply before paying for non-refundable flights. Available at yatraforfun.com/dummy-ticket.
  • Re-application support — if rejected, the Yatra service fee is waived on the second submission (you re-pay the embassy fee, which is non-refundable on either attempt).

Common mistakes Nepali applicants make on the Brazil employment visa

The five mistakes below account for the majority of preventable rejections we see on Nepal-BR files. None of them are about the embassy being difficult — every one is fixable with a 30-minute pre-submission review.

  1. Photograph not to the embassy specification. Most Brazil missions reject photos that fall outside the exact dimensions (typically 35x45mm or 51x51mm), have a non-white background, show ears partially covered, or were taken more than 6 months ago. Use a photo studio in Kathmandu (Bagbazar / Putalisadak / Naxal) that knows the Brazil embassy spec — pay the extra NPR 200 for a fresh, compliant set rather than reusing an old printout.
  2. Bank balance pumped up the week before submission. Embassy reviewers read the 6-month statement, not the closing balance. A sudden NPR 5,00,000 deposit two weeks before submission with no salary or business inflow history flags as manufactured. Maintain a steady balance in line with declared income; if the funds are genuinely sponsored, attach the sponsor's 6-month statement and an undertaking letter rather than depositing into your own account.
  3. Untranslated Nepali documents. Every Nepali-language document submitted to a Brazil mission must be accompanied by a notary-certified English translation — citizenship card, employer letter on Nepali letterhead, lalpurja (land deed), municipality registration, audit reports. Use a Nepal Bar Council-registered translator and have each translation notarised by a Notary Public; embassies routinely return files with raw Nepali originals.
  4. Cover letter that contradicts the booking dates. If the cover letter says you are travelling 12-25 Oct but the flight booking shows 14-22 Oct, the file gets returned for clarification. Re-read the cover letter against every attached booking before submission — dates, accommodation address, sponsor name, and total stay must match across all documents.
  5. Hotel booking that allows free cancellation but no payment proof. Brazil embassies increasingly recognise the "book a refundable hotel just for the visa, cancel after approval" pattern. A confirmation showing prepayment (or at minimum a non-zero deposit) carries far more weight than a free-cancellation booking. If you genuinely need flexibility, attach the booking plus a covering note explaining your itinerary contingencies — silence reads as deception.

After approval — the pre-departure checklist for Brazil

Visa in passport is not the end of the work. Carry the following on the day of travel — Nepali passport holders are routinely secondary-screened at the entry port for Brazil, and producing the right paperwork at immigration shortens the inspection from 30 minutes to 3.

  • Printed visa or e-visa PDF — never rely solely on the digital copy on your phone. Carry one printed copy in your hand baggage and a backup in checked baggage.
  • Confirmed return ticket in your name — Brazil immigration may ask to see the onward flight at arrival, especially for tourist and visit classes.
  • Hotel confirmation for the first 3 nights minimum, with the address printed in the local language where applicable. Immigration officers ask "where are you staying" and a vague answer triggers secondary screening.
  • Travel insurance certificate — increasingly mandatory at the entry port even when the visa was approved without it.
  • Cash in destination currency equivalent to at least USD 100/day for the first 3 days — immigration occasionally asks "show me funds" and a card or e-wallet does not always satisfy.
  • Yatra concierge contact — if you booked through Yatra, save our 24/7 number (+977 970-9066517) for any visa or entry-port issue. We have helped Nepali travellers re-enter Brazil after secondary-screening flags more than 200 times in the last two years.

Brazil embassy and visa centre contact in Kathmandu

Embassy of Brazil — Kathmandu (direct consular jurisdiction over Nepal)
Chundevi Marg, House no. 155, Maharajgunj, Kathmandu 44600, Nepal · P.O. Box 19299, Kathmandu
Phone
+977 1 4721462, +977 1 4721463
Email
[email protected], [email protected]
Hours
Embassy: Mon–Thu 09:00–17:00, Fri 09:00–13:00. Consular Section (visa intake): Mon–Fri 10:00–13:00. Closed on Nepali public holidays + 7 September (Brazilian National Day).
Website
https://www.gov.br/mre/pt-br/embaixada-katmandu

Related Yatra resources

Sources and freshness

This guide is curated from the official Embassy of Brazil — Kathmandu (direct consular jurisdiction over Nepal) portal and the application centre. Embassy data was last verified on 2026-05-05 and this post was last refreshed on 2026-05-12. Visa fees and processing times shift one to two times a year — re-check the embassy portal four weeks before travel.

S

About Sandeep

Founder, Yatra For Fun

Sandeep Kumar Chaudhary Chaudhary founded Yatra For Fun in Kathmandu after a decade running visa applications for Nepali pilgrims, students, and business travellers. He writes the visa guides personally — every fee, document list, and embassy address is verified against the source portal before publication, and updated when the embassy changes its rules.

Full profile →

Frequently Asked Questions

Sources

  1. Yatra — Brazil visa for Nepali citizens
  2. Embassy of Brazil — Kathmandu (direct consular jurisdiction over Nepal) — official site
  3. Brazil visa application portal
  4. Embassy reference: www.gov.br
  5. Embassy reference: formulario-mre.serpro.gov.br — SCI
  6. Embassy reference: www.gov.br

Update log

  • factualInitial publication from embassy_info verified 2026-05-05Sandeep