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No β Brazilians do not need a visa for a short visit to the United Kingdom, but they do need an approved ETA before they travel. Brazil is part of the UK's Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA) scheme, which lets its citizens visit the UK for tourism, business, study or transit for up to 6 months without applying for a visa. Instead, Brazilians apply online for a UK ETA, which is linked electronically to the passport β there is no sticker, no label and no embassy interview.
Brazil is the largest source market for UK travel in South America, with strong family and business links to London. Brazilian citizens have needed a UK ETA for short visits since 8 January 2025. You can review the destination on our UK travel hub or go straight to the UK ETA page.
The UK ETA is a digital travel permission run by the UK Home Office for visitors who do not need a visa for short stays, such as citizens of Brazil. It is not a visa β it is a pre-travel screening that checks your details against security and immigration databases before you travel. For Brazilian citizens, an approved ETA is now required to board a flight, ferry or train to the UK and to be admitted as a visitor for up to 6 months.
Typical reasons Brazilians use an ETA include holidays and sightseeing, visiting family and friends, attending business meetings or conferences, short courses of study, and transit through the UK. It does not permit taking up employment with a UK company, stays beyond 6 months, or living in the UK through repeated visits. If your plans involve any of those, you will need the appropriate UK visa instead.
An ETA is mandatory for every Brazilian citizen who travels to the United Kingdom as a visitor, regardless of age. There is no family or group authorisation: each traveller, including children and babies, needs their own ETA linked to their own passport. A parent or guardian can complete the application on a child's behalf using the child's passport details.
You also need an ETA if you are only transiting through the UK on the way to another country and passing through UK border control. Brazilians have needed an ETA to travel to the UK since 8 January 2025, so it now applies to every short visit unless you already hold another form of UK permission.
You do not need a UK ETA if you already have another form of permission to be in the United Kingdom. You can travel without an ETA if you:
If you plan to stay longer than 6 months, work for a UK employer, get married or register a civil partnership in the UK, or do anything not allowed as a visitor, you need the appropriate UK visa instead of an ETA. When in doubt, choose the route that matches what you will actually do in the UK β an ETA used for the wrong purpose can lead to refusal at the border.
A UK ETA is completed entirely online, so Brazilians do not upload a stack of paperwork, but you must enter accurate details that match your passport exactly. Have the following ready before you apply:
Most Brazilians fly to the United Kingdom from SΓ£o Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, typically arriving at London Heathrow and Gatwick. Apply at least 3 working days before departure β ideally as soon as you book your trip β so that any extra checks have time to clear before you travel. Never buy a non-refundable ticket before your ETA is approved.
For Brazilian applicants, many ETAs are approved within minutes, and the authorisation is sent by email. Some applications take longer and are decided within up to 3 working days. You should not count on instant approval: apply several days before departure so you have a buffer if anything needs attention. If you do not receive a decision straight away, wait for the email rather than submitting a second application β duplicate applications can cause confusion and further delay.
An approved UK ETA is valid for two years from the date of approval, or until your Brazilian passport expires β whichever comes first β and allows multiple entries. On each visit Brazilians may stay up to 6 months. This suits a long holiday, a multi-stop trip around Britain, or several shorter business or family visits over two years.
The two-year validity and the 6-month-per-visit limit are separate: you can come and go as often as you like while the ETA is valid, provided no single stay exceeds 6 months. You must not, however, use frequent or back-to-back visits to live in the UK. The ETA is tied to the passport you applied with, so if you renew or replace your Brazilian passport you will need a new ETA linked to the new document.
An ETA covers visitor activities β tourism, business visits, short study and transit β but not employment. As a Brazilian ETA holder you can:
You cannot work for a UK employer or run a business in the UK, stay longer than 6 months on a single visit, claim public funds or benefits, marry or register a civil partnership, or live in the UK through repeated visits. If you need to work, study long-term or settle, apply for the appropriate UK visa instead.
Most Brazilians only need an ETA: it is applied for online or in the app and is often approved within minutes. Choose a UK visa instead if you plan to stay longer than 6 months, will work for a UK employer, will study a long course, intend to marry or settle in the UK, or are otherwise not eligible to visit visa-free. A visa application involves more documents, biometrics at a visa centre and a longer wait. For a standard holiday, family visit or business trip of up to 6 months, the ETA is faster and entirely online.
An approved ETA lets Brazilians board the plane, train or ferry, but it does not guarantee entry β the final decision rests with a Border Force officer at your port of arrival. Brazilians are not currently able to use the ePassport gates and should head to a Border Force desk, where an officer will check your passport and ask about your trip. Carry your passport, proof of onward or return travel, proof of accommodation, and evidence that you can support yourself during your stay. Provided everything is in order, Brazilians are admitted as a visitor and free to explore the UK β whether that is London, Edinburgh, the Lake District or the Scottish Highlands.
Every traveller needs their own ETA, including children and babies, because each authorisation is linked to an individual passport. A parent or guardian can complete the application for a child using the child's own Brazilian passport details. If you are travelling as a Brazilian family, simply submit a separate ETA application for each member β each traveller is assessed individually, regardless of age.
No visa is needed for short trips β Brazil is part of the UK ETA scheme, so Brazilians travel on an approved Electronic Travel Authorisation for stays of up to 6 months. You apply online or in the UK ETA app and it is linked to your passport, with no embassy interview. A UK visa is only needed for longer stays, work, long-term study, marriage or settlement.
Up to 6 months per visit. The ETA is valid for two years from approval (or until your passport expires) and allows multiple entries, but you must not use repeated visits to effectively live in the UK. For stays longer than 6 months you need a UK visa.
Many are approved within minutes, with the result emailed to you; some take up to 3 working days. Brazilians should apply at least 3 working days before departure and never book a non-refundable trip before approval.
No. An ETA is for tourism, business visits, short study and transit only β it does not allow taking up employment with a UK company or running a business in the UK. You can attend meetings and conferences, but to work you need the appropriate UK work visa.
Yes. Every traveller needs an individual ETA linked to their own passport, including newborns and babies. A parent or guardian can complete and submit the application on the child's behalf.
No. The ETA lets you travel, but a Border Force officer at the port of arrival makes the final decision. Carry proof of return travel, accommodation and funds, and be ready to explain the purpose and length of your trip.
Brazilians have needed a UK ETA to travel to the United Kingdom since 8 January 2025. Before that date, Brazilians could travel visa-free without an ETA; now an approved ETA is required before you board.