Divorce in Brazil vs. Homologation of Foreign Divorce
File in Brazil or have foreign divorce recognized via STJ homologation? Brazilian courts control Brazilian assets.
Divorce in Brazil vs. Homologation of Foreign Divorce
Short answer: If you live in Brazil and want to end your marriage, you can file for divorce here or obtain a divorce abroad and have it recognized through homologation. Judicial foreign divorces require STJ (Superior Tribunal de Justiça) homologation. Extrajudicial/administrative foreign divorces may be registered directly at a cartório. But the critical rule: Brazilian courts have exclusive jurisdiction over immovable property in Brazil. No matter where you divorce, a Brazilian court controls your Brazilian real estate.
This is a decision I help foreign clients make regularly. The right answer depends on where you live, where your assets are, and where your spouse will cooperate.
“The critical rule that every binational couple must understand is CPC Art. 23: Brazilian courts have exclusive jurisdiction over immovable property in Brazil. No matter where you divorce, a Brazilian court controls your Brazilian real estate. Plan for this from day one.” — Zachariah Zagol, Founding Partner, OAB/SP 351.356
Comparison Table
| Feature | Divorce Filed in Brazil | Homologation of Foreign Divorce |
|---|---|---|
| Jurisdiction | Brazilian family court (Vara de Família) | STJ (for judicial foreign divorces) or cartório (for extrajudicial) |
| Applicable law | Brazilian law | Foreign law governs the divorce; Brazilian law governs Brazilian assets |
| Timeline | 1 week - 36 months (depending on type) | 3-12 months for STJ homologation; 2-6 weeks for cartório registration |
| Cost | R$1,000-100,000+ (depending on type) | R$5,000-20,000 (attorney + translation + STJ fees) |
| Property division | Brazilian court divides all assets, including foreign (enforcement varies) | Foreign court may have divided assets; Brazilian court handles Brazilian property separately if needed |
| Brazilian real estate | Handled directly | Requires separate action in Brazil if not addressed in the foreign divorce |
| Custody (children in Brazil) | Handled directly | May require separate action in Brazil |
| Recognition abroad | Requires apostille/legalization for foreign use | Already recognized in the originating country |
| Spouse cooperation needed | Depends on type (consensual vs. contested) | Depends on the foreign proceeding; STJ homologation requires proper service |
When to Divorce in Brazil
Brazilian courts have jurisdiction when:
- Both spouses are domiciled in Brazil
- The defendant spouse is domiciled in Brazil
- The plaintiff spouse has been domiciled in Brazil for at least 1 year (or 6 months if they left the marriage due to the respondent’s conduct)
- The couple’s last shared domicile was in Brazil
Advantages of divorcing in Brazil
1. Complete resolution in one proceeding
A Brazilian divorce can address property division (including foreign assets in theory), custody, child support, spousal support, and name changes in a single action. You do not need parallel proceedings in multiple countries.
2. Direct control over Brazilian assets
Brazilian courts can immediately order property transfers, account freezes, and registration changes for Brazilian assets. There is no additional enforcement step.
3. Established process for foreigners
Brazilian divorce law has been handling international cases for decades. The procedure is well-understood, and judges in major cities (São Paulo, Rio, Brasília) are accustomed to cross-border issues.
4. Immediate effect
Once the Brazilian divorce is finalized (whether at a cartório or by court order), it takes effect immediately. The marriage certificate is annotated, and you are legally single in Brazil.
Disadvantages
- If your spouse lives abroad, serving them adds 3-12 months
- Brazilian courts may struggle to apply foreign property law when required
- Enforcement of Brazilian orders regarding foreign assets requires cooperation from foreign courts
- Longer timeline if contested (12-36+ months)
When to Homologate a Foreign Divorce
What homologation means
Homologation is the process of having a foreign legal decision recognized in Brazil so it has the same legal effect as a Brazilian decision. Without homologation, a foreign divorce has no legal standing in Brazil — you are still married under Brazilian law. The STJ homologation process is governed by the Code of Civil Procedure (Lei 13.105/2015), Arts. 960-965, and by STJ Resolution 9/2005.
Two paths based on the type of foreign divorce
Path 1: Judicial foreign divorce → STJ homologation
If your divorce was issued by a foreign court (judge’s order or decree), it must be homologated by the Superior Tribunal de Justiça (STJ) — Brazil’s highest court for non-constitutional matters. This process is called “homologação de sentença estrangeira.”
Requirements:
- Final and binding foreign divorce decree (no pending appeals)
- Proof that the defendant was properly served (or appeared voluntarily)
- The foreign judgment does not violate Brazilian public policy (ordem pública)
- Apostille + sworn translation of all documents
- Power of attorney for a Brazilian lawyer to file the petition
Timeline: 3-12 months. Uncontested homologations (where the other party does not oppose) are faster. If the respondent challenges the homologation, it becomes contested litigation at the STJ.
Cost: R$5,000-15,000 (attorney fees) + R$500-2,000 (document legalization) + STJ filing fees.
Path 2: Extrajudicial/administrative foreign divorce → Cartório registration
If your divorce was processed administratively — without a court (e.g., a Japanese administrative divorce, a Portuguese conservatória divorce, or a consensual notarial divorce from many civil law countries) — it may be registered directly at a Brazilian cartório under CNJ Provimento 53/2016, which streamlined the recognition process for extrajudicial foreign divorces.
Requirements:
- The divorce was consensual (not contested)
- No minor children requiring custody determination under Brazilian law
- Apostille + sworn translation
- The document clearly shows both parties consented
Timeline: 2-6 weeks.
Cost: R$1,000-3,000.
This direct registration path is significantly faster and cheaper than STJ homologation. However, not all foreign administrative divorces qualify — the cartório will analyze the document and may refer it to the STJ if there are questions.
Advantages of homologating a foreign divorce
1. You are already divorced abroad
If you obtained a divorce in the US, UK, or another country and now need it recognized in Brazil, homologation is your path. You are not re-litigating the divorce — you are asking Brazil to recognize it.
2. Foreign property was already divided
If the foreign court divided foreign assets as part of the divorce, that division is already enforceable in the originating country. You do not need Brazilian courts to re-decide.
3. May be faster if uncontested
An uncontested STJ homologation can take 3-6 months. A new divorce filed in Brazil as a contested matter takes 12+ months.
Disadvantages
- Does not automatically address Brazilian assets — if the foreign divorce divided only foreign property, you may need a separate Brazilian action for Brazilian real estate
- STJ homologation can be contested, adding months
- Document requirements are strict — missing apostilles or translations cause delays
- Cost of legalization adds up
The Exclusive Jurisdiction Rule: Brazilian Assets
This is the single most important principle for binational couples to understand:
CPC Art. 23, I: Brazilian courts have exclusive jurisdiction over disputes involving immovable property located in Brazil.
What this means in practice:
- A US divorce decree that purports to divide a São Paulo apartment has no automatic effect in Brazil
- You need either (a) a Brazilian divorce that directly addresses the property, or (b) a separate Brazilian action after the foreign divorce is homologated
- Brazilian courts will apply Brazilian property law to Brazilian real estate, even if your marriage is governed by foreign property rules
Strategy: If you have Brazilian real estate and are divorcing abroad, include the Brazilian property in the foreign settlement agreement, then seek enforcement in Brazil through homologation plus a complementary action. Or divorce in Brazil and handle everything in one proceeding.
Decision Framework
Divorce in Brazil when:
- Both spouses live in Brazil
- Your most significant assets are in Brazil
- You want one proceeding to handle everything
- Your spouse will cooperate with the Brazilian process
- You prefer Brazilian property division rules
Homologate a foreign divorce when:
- You already divorced abroad
- Most assets are outside Brazil
- Your Brazilian assets are limited (or there are none)
- Your spouse lives abroad and will not participate in a Brazilian proceeding
- The foreign divorce is final and uncontested
Consider both (parallel proceedings) when:
- You have significant assets in both Brazil and another country
- One spouse is in Brazil and the other abroad
- Custody involves children who travel between countries
- You need immediate protective orders in Brazil (asset freezes, custody) while a foreign divorce is pending
FAQ
What if my foreign divorce is already final — do I still need to do anything in Brazil?
Yes. Under the Civil Code (Lei 10.406/2002) and the Code of Civil Procedure (Lei 13.105/2015), until a foreign divorce is homologated (STJ) or registered (cartório), you are still legally married in Brazil. This affects property purchases, inheritance rights, pension benefits, and your ability to remarry in Brazil.
“Until a foreign divorce is homologated by the STJ or registered at a cartorio, you are still legally married in Brazil. I have seen clients discover this when trying to buy property, claim an inheritance, or remarry — years after they thought their divorce was final.” — Zachariah Zagol, Founding Partner, OAB/SP 351.356
Can I remarry in Brazil before homologation is complete?
No. Under Brazilian law, you are still married until the foreign divorce is recognized. Remarrying while still legally married is bigamy (CP Art. 235).
Does the STJ re-examine the merits of the foreign divorce?
No. The STJ only checks formal requirements: was the defendant properly served? Is the judgment final? Does it violate Brazilian public policy? The STJ does not re-litigate custody, property division, or other substantive issues. However, if the respondent argues that the foreign judgment violated their right to defense (due process), the STJ will examine that claim.
What if my ex-spouse contests the homologation?
The respondent can oppose homologation on limited grounds: lack of proper service, violation of Brazilian public policy, or that the judgment is not final. If contested, the STJ holds a hearing and decides. This adds 3-9 months to the process.
Can a foreign divorce affect my children’s custody in Brazil?
A foreign custody order can be homologated, but Brazilian courts retain jurisdiction over children habitually resident in Brazil. If your children live in Brazil, a Brazilian court can modify a foreign custody order. See our cross-border custody guide.
What about the Hague Convention on international divorce recognition?
Brazil is a party to several Hague conventions, but recognition of foreign divorces still requires either STJ homologation or cartório registration — there is no automatic recognition. The Hague conventions primarily streamline service of process and evidence gathering, not direct enforcement.
How do I handle a divorce that was partially done abroad?
Common scenario: You divorced in the US, the US court divided the US assets, but nobody addressed the Brazilian apartment. You can homologate the foreign divorce at the STJ (to establish that you are divorced in Brazil) and then file a separate sobrepartilha action in a Brazilian family court to divide the Brazilian property.
How ZS Can Help
At ZS Advogados, we handle both paths — filing divorce in Brazil for foreign clients and homologating foreign divorces for those who need recognition here. Zac Zagol (OAB/SP 351.356), as the first American OAB-licensed attorney, brings the cross-border perspective that these cases require.
We handle:
- Strategic advice — Whether to divorce in Brazil, homologate a foreign divorce, or pursue parallel proceedings
- STJ homologation — Full representation before the Superior Tribunal de Justiça for judicial foreign divorces
- Cartório registration — Direct registration of extrajudicial foreign divorces
- Brazilian property actions — Complementary proceedings to divide Brazilian assets after a foreign divorce
- Document coordination — Apostille, sworn translation, and legalization of all foreign documents
- Cross-border custody — Coordinating custody matters between Brazil and your home country
Contact us to discuss your situation. The intersection of a foreign divorce and Brazilian assets is one of the most complex areas of cross-border family law — and one where getting the strategy wrong costs years and tens of thousands of reais.
Related comparisons:
Frequently Asked Questions
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