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Orgo-Life the new way to the future Advertising by AdpathwayBrazil’s Ministry of Tourism announced a record 5.3 million foreign visitors in the first half of 2025, a 48% jump from last year. Officials expect 8 million international tourists by year’s end, beating earlier goals.
Most visitors come from Argentina, with over 2.1 million arrivals so far this year. Chile and the United States follow, but with much smaller numbers. European countries together send fewer than half a million tourists.
Despite the upbeat headlines, Brazil’s numbers remain small for a country of its size. Brazil has over 215 million people and is larger than the United States in land area.
Yet, it attracts fewer tourists than the Canary Islands or Paris. Paris alone saw 26 million foreign visitors in 2023. Brazil’s annual total has never reached 8 million.
Tourism now makes up about 8% of Brazil’s economy. International visitors brought in $7.3 billion in 2024, and officials expect more this year. The government credits better marketing and more flights for the growth.
Brazil Tourism Growth Hindered by Safety Access and Service Gaps
Still, Brazil faces big hurdles. Most tourists arrive by land from neighboring countries, not by air. Flights from Europe or North America are expensive and limited.
Safety worries, high prices, and weak public services put off many travelers. Most tourism caters to locals, not foreigners, and few workers speak English or Spanish. Until recently, visa rules also made visiting harder.
Brazil’s recent growth shows progress, but the country lags far behind other major destinations. Mexico, Thailand, and even Argentina attract more foreign tourists each year. Brazil’s “record” is a sign of recovery, not global leadership.
The numbers highlight how much more Brazil could achieve if it solved its long-standing problems with safety, access, and service quality. For now, Brazil’s huge tourism potential remains mostly untapped.