Is it possible for a U.S. citizen to rent a car in Brazil?

3/12/2014 7:19:26 PM

I am from Brazil and I will try to help you.

According to “Departamento Estadual de Trânsito de São Paulo” (Sao Paulo State Transit Department), here what they say about foreigner citizen driving in Brazil:

Portuguese: “Ao ingressar no país, o condutor estrangeiro poderá dirigir com a Carteira de Habilitação do país de origem (desde que
dentro do seu prazo de validade), por até 180 dias. Para tanto, além
da habilitação, o condutor deve portar o passaporte ou documento que
comprove a data de entrada no país.

English: When entering in the country, the foreigner driver can drive with Driver’s License from country of origin (since the license
is not expired), for up to 180 days. For this, besides the driver’s
license
, the driver should carry the passport or a document that
proves the date when entering the country.

However, to drive in Brazil after 180 days, the foreigner must have the Brazilian license or a International license. This is based on reciprocity principle on Vienna Convention.

If you need more help about Brazil (and local laws), I can help.

Source: DETRAN

3/11/2014 3:47:45 AM

I am not Brazilian, and I successfully created a car rental reservation with Movida (http://www.movida.com.br/) to rent a car for 3 days during the World Cup. It was cheaper than going thru a service like Kayak or Priceline, etc. You pay in Brazilian Reales, it cost me about 220 BRL.

Brazilian company websites are kinda of mess in the UI/globalization area, but with a bit of help of google translate you can figure out all the fields and make a reservation.

The website forms often ask you for a CPF (Cadastro de Pessoas Fisicas – literally “Physical Persons Registry”) which is like a SSN in the US. If you’re a foreigner you can often leave it blank or there’ll be check a box that says you’re a foreigner. In the case that it still asks for something there, enter a passport number or something from your ID docs so they can pull it up.

Everything else is pretty similar to the US… you have to pay for insurance Loss Damage Waivers, etc, etc…

4/7/2013 5:20:49 PM

You need the drivers license from your home country an international drivers license that serves as a translation.

Even if there is no legal requirement for this (I found conflicting information on this), you cannot rely that the policeman who stops you in the road nor the clerk at the car rental knows English well enough to read your US license.

There are different ages required depending on the rental agency. Some require you to be 21, others 25.

Credit:stackoverflow.com

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Hello,My name is Aparna Patel,I’m a Travel Blogger and Photographer who travel the world full-time with my hubby.I like to share my travel experience.

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