Brazil β Luxembourg Tax Treaty
The Brazil-Luxembourg tax treaty caps withholding on dividends at 15% for portfolio investors and 10% for qualifying direct investment, and interest at 10%. Royalties are taxed at a uniform 15% across all categories. Private pensions are taxable only in the country of residence, with no withholding at source. This is one of 25 active treaties in Brazil's network and one of 27 in Luxembourg's. The general dividend rate of 15% compares to a median of 15% across Brazil's network and 15% across Luxembourg's.
Verified data
ACD International Tax Conventions (impotsdirects.public.lu) (Treaty list verified April 2026. Rates from individual treaty texts (Articles 10-12). Luxembourg has 0% domestic WHT on interest and royalties.)
Withholding Rate Summary
Source: Luxembourg Treaty Reference| Income Type | Treaty Rate | Statutory Rate (Luxembourg) |
|---|---|---|
| Dividends (general) Portfolio investors | 15% | 15% |
| Dividends (qualified) Beneficial owner is a company holding >= 10% of voting stock | 10%saves 5% | 15% |
| Interest Bank interest, bonds, loans | 10% | 0% |
| Royalties (avg) Patents, copyright, know-how, film/TV | 15% | β |
| Pensions Private pension distributions | 0% | β |
| Social Security Government social security benefits | 0% | β |
βTreaty Rateβ is the maximum withholding permitted under this treaty. The actual effective rate may be lower if domestic law provides a more favorable rate independently. βStatutory Rate (Luxembourg)β shows the rate that applies when no treaty benefit is claimed. Qualified dividend rate requires: Beneficial owner is a company holding >= 10% of voting stock.
Dividends
The general dividend rate of 15% applies to portfolio investors. A reduced rate of 10% is available when beneficial owner is a company holding >= 10% of voting stock. Without the treaty, the statutory withholding rate on dividends is 15%.
Source: Luxembourg Treaty Reference
Interest
Interest payments (bank interest, bonds, loans) are subject to 10% withholding under this treaty, compared to the 0% statutory rate. This represents a no reduction from the statutory rate.
Source: Luxembourg Treaty Reference
Royalties
Royalty withholding rates vary by the type of intellectual property. This treaty distinguishes 4 categories, with rates ranging from 15% to 15%.
Source: Luxembourg Treaty Reference
Pensions & Social Security
Private pension distributions are taxable only in the country of residence, with no withholding at source. Government social security benefits are exempt from source-country withholding.
Source: Luxembourg Treaty Reference
Comparative Context
π§π·Brazil's Network
Among Brazil's 25 active treaty partners, the 15% general dividend rate ranks 18th (median: 15%).
| Partner | Rate |
|---|---|
| United Kingdom | 15% |
| Hungary | 15% |
| Italy | 15% |
| Luxembourg (this treaty) | 15% |
| Mexico | 15% |
| Norway | 15% |
| Portugal | 15% |
π±πΊLuxembourg's Network
Among Luxembourg's 27 active treaty partners, the 15% general dividend rate ranks 8th (median: 15%).
| Partner | Rate |
|---|---|
| Austria | 15% |
| Australia | 15% |
| Belgium | 15% |
| Brazil (this treaty) | 15% |
| Canada | 15% |
| Switzerland | 15% |
| Germany | 15% |