BRL Exchange Rates — Brazilian Real Today

The official currency of Brazil, the largest economy in South America. See today's BRL exchange rate against every major world currency, sourced from the European Central Bank's daily reference rates.

About the Brazilian Real

The official currency of Brazil, the largest economy in South America.

On this page you'll find today's BRL exchange rate against every major world currency, sourced from the European Central Bank's daily reference rates. The ECB publishes one official mid-market rate per business day at approximately 16:00 Central European Time — the same benchmark used by financial institutions, journalists, and accountants when a single reliable number is required.

How to read these BRL rates

Each rate shows how many units of the target currency you get for one BRL. So if BRL to EUR reads 0.92, one BRL buys 0.92 euros. To go the other way, divide 1 by the rate, or use the reverse-pair page linked next to each conversion.

Remember: ECB reference rates are mid-market — the midpoint between what banks pay and receive in the wholesale interbank market. Your retail bank, card provider, or exchange bureau will apply a margin on top. Fintech cards typically stay within 0.5% of this rate; high-street banks add 1–3%; airport bureaux can add 5% or more.

Popular BRL conversions

PairOpen converter
BRL to EURBRL → EUR (Euro)
BRL to GBPBRL → GBP (British Pound)
BRL to JPYBRL → JPY (Japanese Yen)
BRL to CADBRL → CAD (Canadian Dollar)
BRL to AUDBRL → AUD (Australian Dollar)
BRL to CHFBRL → CHF (Swiss Franc)
BRL to CNYBRL → CNY (Chinese Yuan)
BRL to SEKBRL → SEK (Swedish Krona)
BRL to NOKBRL → NOK (Norwegian Krone)
BRL to DKKBRL → DKK (Danish Krone)
BRL to MXNBRL → MXN (Mexican Peso)
BRL to INRBRL → INR (Indian Rupee)

For any pair not listed, use the calculator on our main currency converter — it supports every currency on this hub in both directions.

Frequently asked about BRL

Where do the BRL rates on this page come from?

Directly from the European Central Bank's daily reference publication. The ECB gathers quotes from a panel of major banks around 14:10 CET and publishes the midpoint shortly after 16:00 CET each business day. We refresh against that feed automatically.

Why does the BRL rate here differ from what my bank quotes?

The ECB rate is the mid-market benchmark. Banks and money-transfer services add a margin — that's how they earn on the transaction. Comparing their quote against the mid-market rate is the fastest way to see whether you're getting a fair deal.

Can I use these BRL rates for accounting or invoicing?

Yes — ECB reference rates are widely accepted for accounting, tax reporting, and cross-border invoicing in the EU and elsewhere. Confirm the required source with your local tax authority; many explicitly reference the ECB feed.