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posted 3 hours ago
Last updated: 15 June 2026
When employment ends in Brazil, the question every employer faces is not whether they must pay, it is how quickly. Understanding what is the termination block period is essential because Brazilian law imposes strict deadlines on final salary, accrued benefits, notice-related pay and the FGTS 40% indemnity, and missing those deadlines triggers automatic penalties that no payroll adjustment can reverse. The Consolidação das Leis do Trabalho (CLT) and the FGTS regulatory framework together create a narrow compliance window that varies depending on termination type, notice arrangements and whether cause has been established. This guide walks HR managers, in-house counsel and employers through every deadline, calculation and document they need to get employment termination in Brazil right the first time.
TL;DR, three-step compliance summary:
The termination block period is the practical name given to the fixed window of calendar days within which an employer must pay every item of severance payment in Brazil following the end of employment. The term does not appear as a single statutory heading in the CLT, but it captures the combined effect of Article 477 of the CLT, which governs final payment (verbas rescisórias) timing, and the FGTS regulations that mandate deposit of the 40% indemnity within the same window.
In concrete terms, after the 2017 Labour Reform (Law 13,467/2017), the CLT consolidated the payment deadline to ten calendar days from the end of the contract, regardless of whether the employer grants working notice or pays in lieu. During this block period, the employer must deliver all amounts owed, outstanding salary, proportional thirteenth salary, accrued and proportional vacation plus the constitutional one-third bonus, FGTS deposits for the final month, and the 40% FGTS indemnity if the dismissal is without cause.
Failure to pay within the termination block period triggers the penalty set out in paragraph 8 of CLT Article 477: a fine equivalent to one month of the employee’s salary, paid directly to the worker.
Not every end of employment in Brazil carries the same obligations. The table below maps each termination type to its key employer action, the applicable termination block period deadline and the standard penalty for late payment under CLT termination rules.
| Termination Type | Key Employer Actions Required | Payment Deadline & Typical Penalty |
|---|---|---|
| Dismissal without cause (dispensa sem justa causa) | Pay all verbas rescisórias; deposit FGTS for final month; pay FGTS 40% indemnity; issue Guia de Recolhimento Rescisório (GRRF); update Carteira de Trabalho. | 10 calendar days from end of contract. Late: fine of one employee’s monthly salary (CLT Art. 477, §8). |
| Dismissal with cause (justa causa) | Pay salary balance and accrued vacation + ⅓ only; no FGTS 40% penalty; document cause with written notice and evidence. | 10 calendar days. Same late-payment fine applies if deadline is missed. |
| Voluntary resignation | Pay salary balance, proportional vacation + ⅓, proportional thirteenth salary; no FGTS 40% penalty; deduct unworked notice if employee does not serve notice period. | 10 calendar days from end of notice (worked or waived). Same late-payment fine applies. |
| Termination by mutual agreement (distrato, CLT Art. 484-A) | Pay 50% of notice (if indenizado); 20% FGTS indemnity (not 40%); remaining verbas rescisórias in full. | 10 calendar days. Same late-payment fine applies. |
| Contract expiry (fixed-term) | Pay salary balance, proportional vacation + ⅓, proportional thirteenth salary, FGTS for final month; no FGTS 40% unless early termination by employer. | 10 calendar days from contract end date. Same late-payment fine. |
For the most common, and most liability-heavy, scenario, employers should follow this sequence:
Critical reminder: all steps must be completed within ten calendar days. If the tenth day falls on a weekend or public holiday, payment must be anticipated to the last preceding business day.
Where just cause (justa causa) is established under CLT Article 482, the employer’s financial exposure drops significantly, there is no FGTS 40% penalty, no notice payment and no proportional thirteenth salary or proportional vacation. However, the documentation burden is higher: the employer must preserve written evidence of the misconduct, witness statements and any prior warnings. The remaining amounts (salary balance and accrued vacation plus the constitutional one-third) must still be paid within ten calendar days. Failing to document cause properly exposes employers to court reversal of the dismissal and full severance liability.
The notice period in Brazil termination is one of the most misunderstood elements because it directly affects when the ten-day payment clock starts. Under CLT Article 487, the statutory minimum notice is 30 days. Law 12,506/2011 adds three additional days for each completed year of service, up to a cap of 90 days total.
Employers have two options:
Choosing pay in lieu of notice in Brazil accelerates the payment timeline considerably. An employee with eight years of service would be entitled to 54 days of worked notice (30 + 24), but if the employer opts for aviso prévio indenizado, all amounts, including the lump-sum notice payment, must be settled within ten calendar days of notification.
The formula is straightforward: 30 days + (3 days × completed years of service), capped at 90 days. For practical payroll purposes, the notice payment equals the employee’s daily rate multiplied by the total notice days. FGTS at 8% applies to the notice-period payment even when it is paid in lieu, a detail that directly increases the base for the 40% FGTS indemnity calculation.
The FGTS 40% penalty is the single largest financial component of dismissal without cause in Brazil and the item most frequently litigated when employers miss the termination block period. Under Article 18, paragraph 1, of Law 8,036/1990, when an employer dismisses a worker without cause, the employer must deposit an indemnity equal to 40% of the total FGTS balance accumulated during the employment relationship.
| Item | Calculation | Amount (BRL) |
|---|---|---|
| Employee monthly gross salary | , | 8,000.00 |
| Length of service | 5 years (60 months) | , |
| FGTS deposited monthly (8%) | 8,000 × 8% | 640.00/month |
| Estimated total FGTS balance (excl. monetary correction) | 640 × 60 | 38,400.00 |
| FGTS 40% indemnity | 38,400 × 40% | 15,360.00 |
Note: the actual FGTS balance will be higher because Caixa applies monthly monetary correction (atualização monetária) and annual interest at 3% per year. Employers must request the employee’s FGTS statement from Caixa to obtain the precise balance before calculating the 40%.
Using the same employee (BRL 8,000/month, 5 years of service), if the employer opts for pay in lieu of notice in Brazil for 45 days:
| Item | Calculation | Amount (BRL) |
|---|---|---|
| Notice pay (45 days) | 8,000 ÷ 30 × 45 | 12,000.00 |
| FGTS on notice pay (8%) | 12,000 × 8% | 960.00 |
| Revised FGTS balance | 38,400 + 960 | 39,360.00 |
| FGTS 40% indemnity (revised) | 39,360 × 40% | 15,744.00 |
The difference of BRL 384 illustrates why payroll teams must include the FGTS component of the notice-period payment before calculating the 40% indemnity. Under-depositing, even slightly, is treated as a late or incomplete payment and can attract penalties.
Employers that fail to deposit the FGTS 40% indemnity within the termination block period face multiple consequences. The CLT Article 477, §8 fine (one monthly salary) applies to the overall late payment of verbas rescisórias. Additionally, Caixa Econômica Federal imposes interest and monetary correction on late FGTS deposits. In practice, the Tribunal Superior do Trabalho (TST) has consistently upheld employees’ claims for the Article 477 fine plus corrected FGTS amounts when employers miss the ten-day window, reinforcing that partial payment does not cure the violation.
Compliance with the termination block period depends on knowing exactly which CLT termination rules govern each obligation. The key statutory references are:
Employers should not wait for the regular monthly payroll cycle to process termination payments. The ten-day deadline is absolute and runs from the end of the contract, not from the next payroll closing date. Best practice is to run a dedicated off-cycle payroll for each termination, ensuring the payment is posted and the bank transfer executed within seven calendar days, leaving a buffer of three days for administrative checks and receipt collection.
Thorough documentation is both a legal requirement and an employer’s primary defence against future labour claims. The following checklist covers every record HR and payroll must produce and retain when the termination of employment contracts in Brazil occurs:
Employers should retain all termination records for a minimum of five years (the general statute of limitations for labour claims under CLT Article 11), though FGTS-related records should be kept for thirty years in line with the prescription period for FGTS deposit claims under prevailing TST jurisprudence.
For payroll teams managing employment termination in Brazil for the first time, the following day-by-day flow keeps every obligation within the termination block period:
Important: if Day 10 falls on a non-business day, all payments must clear by the last business day before it.
Even well-prepared employers occasionally encounter situations that threaten compliance with the termination block period. The most common risk scenarios include:
Understanding what is the termination block period is only the first step. Employers operating in Brazil should build an internal compliance checklist based on the framework above, train payroll teams on off-cycle processing, and maintain standing access to Caixa’s Conectividade Social portal to avoid last-minute FGTS deposit delays. For complex terminations, including collective dismissals, executive-level departures or disputed just-cause scenarios, early engagement with qualified Brazilian employment counsel is essential. To connect with a qualified lawyer, visit the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Elias Jabbour at KLA Advogados, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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