Brazil’s Tax Revenue Hits Record High on Oil Windfall

Friday, May 22, 2026

Brazil's federal tax revenue surged in April, official data showed on Thursday, buoyed by higher oil-related receipts as elevated crude prices linked to the U.S.-Israel war on Iran lifted government intake under President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

Total revenue reached 278.823 billion reais ($55.86 billion), up 7.82% in real terms from a year earlier and a record for the month, repeating a pattern seen in every month so far this year.

Tax revenue overseen by the federal revenue service rose 7.31% in real terms in April, while receipts collected by other agencies - largely driven by oil royalties - jumped 14.89%.

As a net oil exporter, Latin America's largest economy has been expecting stronger revenues amid commodity price volatility tied to the Middle East conflict.

Within sectors, tax payments from "oil and natural gas extraction" soared some 541% from the same month a year earlier, the revenue service said, by far the largest percentage increase across all industries.

The government also flagged stronger corporate income tax collection, higher social security revenues and increased taxes on fixed-income investments as key contributors to April's performance.

Lula's government has been seeking to improve public finances chiefly through higher revenue, after raising some taxes and rolling back tax breaks.

Year-to-date, tax revenue was up 5.41% in real terms to 1.06 trillion reais, also a record for the period.

($1 = 4.9915 reais)


(Reuters - Reporting by Marcela Ayres; Editing by Chris Reese and Alistair Bell)

Categories: Finance Industry News Activity South America Oil and Gas

Related Stories

UK Moves to Close Tax Loophole Used by Oil and Gas Firms

Panoro Targets Higher Output After Equatorial Guinea's Block G Deal

Petrobras Nears Commercial Declaration for Aram Offshore Discovery

Current News

UK Moves to Close Tax Loophole Used by Oil and Gas Firms

Brazil’s Tax Revenue Hits Record High on Oil Windfall

Indonesia Locks In LNG Supplies from Inpex' Abadi and Eni’s South Hub

CIP Remains Eager to Invest in Italian Offshore Wind

Subscribe for OE Digital E‑News