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Complementary Law No.227/2026 (LC No.227/2026) has fundamentally altered the landscape for tax reform contracts Brazil practitioners must now navigate, replacing five legacy consumption taxes with a dual-VAT framework comprising the federal CBS (Contribuição sobre Bens e Serviços) and the subnational IBS (Imposto sobre Bens e Serviços). This shift rewrites the economics embedded in virtually every commercial agreement and share-purchase agreement operating in or touching Brazil. For transaction teams mid-deal and corporate counsel managing live contract portfolios, the practical question is no longer whether existing clauses are adequate but how quickly they can be retooled. This playbook provides clause-level drafting guidance, annotated model language and a negotiation framework designed for immediate deployment.
Key takeaways at a glance:
LC No.227/2026, promulgated pursuant to Constitutional Amendment No.132/2023, implements Brazil’s most significant indirect-tax overhaul in decades. The statute replaces five overlapping consumption taxes, PIS, COFINS (federal), ICMS (state), ISS (municipal) and IPI (federal excise), with two broad-base value-added taxes: the federal CBS and the subnational IBS. The CBS is administered by the Receita Federal, while the IBS is collected by a newly created subnational tax committee (Comitê Gestor do IBS) coordinating states and municipalities.
| Legislative milestone | Transitional rule | Contracting implication |
|---|---|---|
| Promulgation of LC No.227/2026 | Establishes CBS and IBS framework; sets phase-in timetable | Trigger contract-portfolio review for all agreements with tax-inclusive pricing |
| CBS testing / pilot phase | CBS begins at reduced introductory rate alongside legacy PIS/COFINS | Price-adjustment clauses must reference dual-rate periods; audit rights become critical |
| IBS phase-in (graduated ICMS/ISS reduction) | State ICMS and municipal ISS gradually decrease as IBS rate increases | Escrow sizing and reps must account for assessments under both old and new regimes |
| Full CBS/IBS implementation | Legacy taxes fully extinguished; remaining credits subject to carryover rules | Sunset clauses on pass-through and price-adjustment mechanisms should align with this date |
Under Brazil’s pre-reform system, PIS, COFINS, ICMS and ISS were embedded, sometimes opaquely, into contract prices. Suppliers routinely quoted prices inclusive of these levies, and the effective tax burden varied by state, municipality and product classification. LC No.227/2026 dismantles this architecture. The shift to CBS and IBS changes the effective rate, the point of incidence (origin to destination) and the mechanics of input-credit recovery, all of which directly alter the economics of existing commercial arrangements.
| Contract type | Typical IBS/CBS exposure | Recommended immediate action |
|---|---|---|
| Long-term supply (fixed price) | Embedded taxes in fixed prices; indexation gap | Add express price-adjustment and pass-through clause with audit rights |
| Services agreements | Tax incidence shift between provider and customer jurisdictions | Insert tax gross-up / net-of-tax language; specify destination-based allocation |
| Franchise / licence | Reclassification risk for mixed goods/services supplies | Define tax allocation and adjustment mechanics; add reclassification indemnity |
| Concession / PPP | Regulated tariff adjustment lag | Negotiate regulatory pass-through pre-approval; add force majeure carve-out for tax reform |
The cornerstone of any tax reform contracts Brazil compliance programme is a well-drafted tax pass-through clause. Generic formulations referencing “all applicable taxes” are insufficient because they do not address the CBS/IBS calculation methodology, the transition from legacy levies or the evidentiary requirements a customer may legitimately demand. Below are five model clauses, each annotated with guidance on deployment context, negotiation pressure points and recommended fall-backs.
Clause 1, Basic vendor-to-customer pass-through (IBS/CBS).
“The Price is exclusive of CBS and IBS. The Supplier shall add to each invoice the CBS and IBS amounts calculated in accordance with applicable law at the rates in effect on the invoice date. The Customer shall pay such amounts in addition to the Price within the payment terms specified herein.”
Annotation: Suitable for new agreements where the supplier has bargaining power. Straightforward but may face customer resistance in competitive markets. Consider adding a rate-cap mechanism as a concession.
Clause 2, Net price / gross-up for taxes.
“The Price is a net amount. If any CBS, IBS or successor tax is required to be withheld or deducted from payments to the Supplier, the Customer shall gross up the payment so that the Supplier receives an amount equal to the Price as if no such withholding or deduction had been made.”
Annotation: Strongly supplier-friendly. Appropriate for cross-border intra-group agreements or transactions where the supplier is the economically dominant party. Buyers typically resist this language and will seek a cap or a shared-burden formula.
Clause 3, Conditional pass-through with notice and evidence.
“If the aggregate indirect-tax burden applicable to the Goods under CBS and IBS exceeds the aggregate burden that would have applied under PIS, COFINS, ICMS and IPI as of the Base Date, the Supplier may increase the Price by the verified differential, provided that: (a) the Supplier delivers to the Customer a written notice specifying the calculation; (b) the Customer has 15 business days to verify; and (c) any dispute is referred to the mechanism set out in Clause [X].”
Annotation: Balanced approach for long-term supply relationships. The notice-and-verify mechanism reduces disputes. The reference to the Base Date pins the comparison to a known benchmark. Industry observers expect this structure to become the market standard for IBS/CBS contract drafting in supply chains.
Clause 4, Service-specific variant (provider bears tax unless invoiced).
“The Service Fee includes all taxes borne by the Provider. Notwithstanding the foregoing, any CBS or IBS levied on the Services that was not in effect or was levied at a lower rate as of the Effective Date shall be invoiced separately to the Client and shall be payable in addition to the Service Fee.”
Annotation: Useful for services agreements where the provider historically absorbed ISS. Preserves the status quo allocation while carving out reform-specific increases.
Clause 5, Capped pass-through with sunset.
“The Supplier may pass through to the Customer increases in indirect tax resulting solely from the enactment or implementation of LC No.227/2026 (CBS/IBS), subject to: (i) a cap of [X]% of the unit Price per calendar year; and (ii) expiry of this clause on [date of full IBS/CBS implementation], after which the parties shall negotiate revised pricing in good faith.”
Annotation: Compromise language for negotiations where neither party accepts full exposure. The cap and sunset provide certainty and a built-in renegotiation trigger.
Negotiation checklist for counsel:
While tax pass-through clauses address the allocation of new-regime taxes, price adjustment and change-of-law clauses serve a broader function: they provide a contractual mechanism for rebalancing the commercial bargain when legislation materially alters the cost structure. Under LC No.227/2026, the change is sufficiently fundamental that generic “regulatory change” language is unlikely to provide adequate protection. Clauses must be formulaic, evidence-based and time-bound.
“If, as a result of the enactment or implementation of LC No.227/2026 or any regulation thereunder, the Effective Tax Rate applicable to the Goods exceeds the Base Tax Rate by more than [0.5] percentage points, the Price shall be adjusted in accordance with the following formula:
Adjusted Price = Base Price × (1 + (ETR – BTR))
where ETR is the Effective Tax Rate (combined CBS and IBS as a percentage of the net supply value) and BTR is the Base Tax Rate (combined PIS, COFINS, ICMS and IPI applicable as of [Base Date]).”
Worked numeric example: Suppose a product’s Base Price is BRL 1,000, and the Base Tax Rate (combined legacy taxes) was 27.5%. If the combined CBS/IBS rate applicable to the same supply is 28.5%, the differential is 1.0 percentage point. The Adjusted Price = BRL 1,000 × (1 + 0.01) = BRL 1,010. For a supply contract delivering 10,000 units per month, the annual impact is BRL 1.2 million, a figure that justifies the drafting investment.
Buyer-friendly variant:
“Any change in applicable tax law, including the enactment of LC No.227/2026, shall not entitle the Seller to any Price increase unless: (a) the change results in a demonstrated net increase in the Seller’s direct tax cost of supplying the Goods exceeding [X]% of the Base Price; (b) the Seller provides an independent auditor’s certificate within [30] days of the change; and (c) the Buyer has the right to terminate this Agreement on [90] days’ notice if the cumulative price increase exceeds [Y]%.”
Seller-friendly variant:
“In the event of a Change of Law (defined to include any amendment, enactment, repeal or reinterpretation of tax legislation, including LC No.227/2026), the Seller shall be entitled to adjust the Price to reflect the direct and indirect cost impact of such change, effective from the date of implementation, upon written notice to the Buyer.”
For M&A transactions governed by Brazil’s 2026 rules, the dual-period exposure created by LC No.227/2026 demands purpose-built tax representations, indemnities and escrow mechanics. Standard tax-compliance reps drafted before the reform do not capture transition-specific risks: legacy-tax assessments that may be issued during the CBS/IBS phase-in, credit carryover disputes, or the reclassification of historical supplies under the new taxonomy. Counsel advising on merger approval in Brazil should treat LC No.227/2026 risk allocation as a dedicated workstream.
“The Company has, in all material respects, complied with all obligations under PIS, COFINS, ICMS, ISS and IPI for all tax periods ending on or before the Closing Date, and has made all filings required under LC No.227/2026 and any implementing regulations in respect of CBS and IBS. All tax credits (including accumulated ICMS credits) reflected in the Closing Accounts are valid, properly documented and available for utilisation or carryover in accordance with the transitional provisions of LC No.227/2026. There are no pending or threatened tax assessments, audits or disputes relating to the transition from legacy taxes to CBS/IBS.”
Annotation: This representation is deliberately broad. Sellers will push to qualify with “to the Seller’s knowledge” and materiality scrapes. Buyers should resist knowledge qualifiers on factual tax-compliance matters and insist on a full disclosure schedule for any pending or expected assessments.
“The Seller shall indemnify and hold harmless the Buyer and the Company against any Loss arising from: (a) any tax liability of the Company under PIS, COFINS, ICMS, ISS or IPI for pre-Closing tax periods; (b) any loss, disallowance or reduction of tax credits (including ICMS credits) that were reflected in the Closing Accounts but are subsequently challenged, denied or rendered unavailable under the transitional provisions of LC No.227/2026; and (c) any additional CBS or IBS liability assessed against the Company for pre-Closing periods as a result of reclassification of supplies under the new tax framework.”
Annotation: This indemnity drafting Brazil model goes beyond standard language by expressly covering credit carryover risk (limb (b)) and reclassification risk (limb (c)). Time bars, caps and baskets should be negotiated separately, but the substantive coverage should be non-negotiable for buyers in deals closing during the transition window.
Assume a target company with annual indirect-tax payments of BRL 50 million under the legacy regime. The estimated maximum downside exposure from transition-related assessments (credit disallowance, rate differential, reclassification) is modelled at 8% of annual tax payments, or BRL 4 million. A prudent escrow would be sized at 2–3× the modelled exposure, yielding an escrow range of BRL 8–12 million.
Suggested release schedule:
| Allocation option | Buyer exposure | Seller exposure | Recommended use case |
|---|---|---|---|
| Broad indemnity (no cap) | Low | High | Distressed sales or strong buyer leverage |
| Time-limited indemnity (3 years) | Medium | Medium | Standard commercial M&A |
| Escrow at 2–3× modelled exposure | Balanced | Balanced | Deals with uncertain tax-transition exposure |
| Purchase-price adjustment (post-closing true-up) | Low–Medium | Medium | Deals where tax modelling is incomplete at signing |
Every deal closing during the LC No.227/2026 transition will involve a negotiation over who bears reform risk. The following worked positions illustrate typical opening stances and a path to compromise.
Seller’s opening position:
Buyer’s opening position:
Likely compromise (industry observers expect this to become standard):
Organisations doing business in Brazil, whether as domestic operators or foreign investors who have opened a company in Brazil or obtained a CPF/CNPJ as foreign entities, should treat contract remediation as a parallel workstream to tax-compliance preparation. The following checklist sequences the most critical actions.
| Action | Responsible team | Target timing |
|---|---|---|
| Audit all active contracts for fixed-price or tax-inclusive pricing | Legal + Commercial | Within 30 days |
| Identify contracts renewing during the transition window | Contract management | Within 30 days |
| Insert interim pass-through clause into upcoming renewals | Legal | Next renewal cycle |
| Model P&L impact of CBS/IBS on top-20 contracts by value | Finance + Tax | Within 60 days |
| Update standard terms and conditions (buy-side and sell-side) | Legal | Within 60 days |
| Brief commercial and procurement teams on new clause requirements | Legal | Within 45 days |
| Notify key counterparties of intended price-adjustment process | Commercial | As per contract notice provisions |
| Review M&A pipeline for SPA amendments and escrow recalculation | M&A / Corporate | Immediate |
LC No.227/2026 is not a distant policy event, it is an active, live risk factor in every commercial and M&A contract touching Brazil. The model clauses, negotiation frameworks and implementation checklists in this playbook provide transactional counsel with a concrete starting point for tax reform contracts Brazil deal teams must urgently address. Early movers who embed reform-specific language into their documentation now will avoid costly renegotiations, disputed invoices and post-closing claims during what industry observers expect to be a turbulent transition period. Practitioners should adapt the sample clauses to the specific risk profile of each transaction and seek jurisdiction-specific advice on statutory deadlines, rate confirmations and credit-carryover mechanics as Receita Federal implementing guidance continues to develop.
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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