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Thursday, July 2, 2026

Brazil Politics and Society

Brazil Loan Defaults Hit a Record Even as Lula Fights Debt

By · July 2, 2026 · 5 min read

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Economy

Key Facts

The record. The share of loans more than ninety days overdue rose to 4.7% in May, the highest since the central bank series began in 2011.

Households. Family default reached 5.6%, also a record, while company default climbed to 3.24%, the worst since 2017.

Despite relief. The rise came even as the government’s Desenrola drive renegotiated some R$20bn ($3.85bn) in debt.

The burden. Debt payments now eat up about 28% of the average family’s income before other costs.

The cost. The average rate on free-market credit stood near 49.5% a year, and above 62% for households.

The stock. Total credit in the financial system reached R$7.3tn ($1.4tn), up more than nine percent over the year.

The level of Brazil loan defaults has climbed to the highest on record, a sign that households are struggling to keep up despite falling inflation. The strain is deepening even as the government pours effort into helping people clear their debts.

Brazil Loan Defaults Hit a Record Even as Lula Fights Debt. (Photo Internet reproduction)
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The central bank reported on July 1 that the share of credit more than ninety days overdue reached four point seven percent in May. That is the highest reading since the series began in March 2011.

For a reader abroad, the number is a window into a squeeze that shapes daily life in Brazil. Borrowing here is among the most expensive in the world, and the bill is now falling due for millions of families.

What the Brazil loan defaults data shows

The rise touched both sides of the economy. Household default edged up to five point six percent, itself a record, while company default climbed to about three point two percent, the worst reading since late 2017.

The picture is worse in the costliest corner of the market. In free-market credit, where banks and customers set their own terms, the default rate reached six point two percent, and among households it hit seven point six percent.

Prices explain much of the pain. The average rate on new free-market loans stood near fifty percent a year, and rose above sixty percent for households, with revolving card debt far higher still.

Even so, lending kept growing. New loans totalled about six hundred and ninety billion reais in the month, and the total credit stock reached seven point three trillion reais, up more than nine percent over the year.

The bank spread, the gap between what banks pay for money and what they charge, barely moved, easing only slightly. For households it remained above twenty-eight percentage points, a reminder of how dear consumer credit stays even when policy rates hold.

What sets Brazil apart is the kind of debt. Unlike mortgage-heavy economies, most Brazilian borrowing is high-interest consumer credit with no collateral, so every month of elevated rates bites household budgets directly.

Why the relief programme has not turned the tide

The timing is awkward for the government. The record arrived in the first full month of Desenrola, the flagship programme that lets people renegotiate overdue debt at steep discounts.

According to the government, the latest round has already restructured around twenty billion reais across some one point four million contracts. Yet the overall default figure kept rising rather than falling.

The gap makes sense on closer look. Renegotiation moves an old debt into a new, current one, but it does little on its own to stop fresh borrowing from souring while interest rates stay high.

Analysts note another wrinkle. Digital banks have seen defaults rise faster than their customer bases, a sign the stress is concentrated in newer, thinner slices of the credit market.

The stakes for policy and the election

The debt squeeze is more than a household worry. With payments consuming close to a third of the average family’s income, weaker spending flows straight through to shops and services that employ most Brazilians.

It is also political. In an election year, the government has staked much on visible debt relief, so a record default rate is an uncomfortable scorecard heading into the second half of 2026.

For investors, the reading is a caution flag on the Brazilian consumer. As long as the benchmark rate stays high, the cost of credit will keep testing how much more debt families can carry.

How high did Brazil loan defaults rise?

The share of credit more than ninety days overdue reached four point seven percent in May, the highest since the central bank series began in 2011. Household default hit five point six percent and company default about three point two percent.

Why did defaults rise despite the Desenrola programme?

Renegotiation shifts an overdue debt into a new current one, but it does not stop fresh loans from going bad while interest rates stay high. The programme renegotiated around twenty billion reais, yet new borrowing kept souring faster than old debt was cleared.

Why does this matter for the wider economy?

Debt payments now absorb close to a third of the average family’s income, which weakens consumer spending across shops and services. In an election year, a record default rate is also a political problem for a government that has promised relief.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the current Brazil loan default rate and why is it significant?

The share of loans more than ninety days overdue reached 4.7% in May, the highest since the central bank's data series began in March 2011. Household default specifically hit 5.6%, also a record, while company default climbed to 3.24%, the worst since 2017.

How much of a Brazilian family's income goes toward debt payments?

Debt payments now consume approximately 28% of the average family's income before other costs are considered. This burden is compounded by extremely high borrowing costs, with average free-market credit rates near 49.5% per year and above 62% specifically for households.

Has the Brazilian government taken any steps to address the debt crisis?

The government launched a program called Desenrola, which renegotiated approximately R$20 billion ($3.85 billion) in debt. However, default rates continued rising despite this relief effort, suggesting the broader debt burden remains severe.

Connected Coverage

Desenrola Adimplentes: Brazil’s Cheaper Credit for Good Payers

Brazil’s Budget Swings From Surplus to Deficit

Brazil Fintech 2026: Pix, Digital Banks, Payment Revolution

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