All Disciplines
Brazil
Number of recipients
In addition to being a prestigious academic exchange program, the Fulbright Program is designed to expand and strengthen relationships between the people of the United States and citizens of other nations and to promote international understanding and cooperation. To support this mission, Fulbright Scholars may be asked to give public talks, mentor students, and otherwise engage with the host community, in addition to their primary activities.
This award supports independent or collaborative research at Brazilian universities, research institutes and NGOs in exceptional cases. The strategic goal of the U.S. Fulbright Scholar Program in Brazil is to support the internationalization process of the Brazilian higher education system. In this way, scholars are expected to work on their research projects and develop activities that foster students' and peers' mobility and other collaborative initiatives. Professionals, artists, and scholars with little or no academic or professional experience in Brazil are also encouraged to apply.
Projects involving field research among Indigenous populations or nature reserves must have authorization from the Brazilian government. Please contact your host well ahead of time for information on necessary research clearance and allow at least ten months for the entire process.
For further information about this award, please visit the Fulbright Commission website.
The Fulbright Commission welcomes projects in all parts of Brazil.
Candidates must designate a Brazilian accredited academic institution or research institute to serve as the Brazilian host institution to develop their project. Non-profit organizations, archives, museums, governmental agencies, etc., are acceptable and may be desirable depending on the project's nature. Feel free to direct any questions to the Fulbright Commission about the eligibility of your preferred institution.
The awards can be two, three, or four months long. Two-or four-month awards can be split into equal segments of 1+1 or 2+2 months. Split awards are known as Flex Awards. For additional information, please see the Flex description below.
The Fulbright Scholar must take their award between July 1st, 2026, and September 30th, 2027.
Please be aware that most institutions in Brazil take a recess between December and January.
In Brazil, flex awards allow the stay to be split into two visits of one or two months each. There must be a period of at least two months between the two visits.
Flex candidates can propose two host institutions in different parts of Brazil, one for each visit, provided that the activities in each site are part of the same project.
The Flex Award is designed for scholars who require multiple visits to the host country. This option allows grants to be conducted over two or three short segments. Applicants must select Flex in the application form, and clearly describe their plans for Flex in their project statement, including a project timeline. Flex grantees may be asked to give public talks, mentor students, and otherwise engage with the host-country academic community.
All applicants must meet the Program eligibility requirements (click to review the requirements).
We encourage candidates to contact the chosen Brazilian institution to discuss interests, project feasibility, and availability to host them for the proposed award period.
Candidates should not wait until near the application deadline to contact the Brazilian institution of their choice to obtain a letter of invitation. If this is your first time communicating with a potential Brazilian host, be aware that a response can take longer than expected.
The letter of invitation can include:
- confirmation of the Brazilian institution's interest in hosting the U.S. scholar, professional, or artist
- confirmation that the U.S. Scholar will have access to the institution's facilities and services
- information about project feasibility regarding language skills
- information on how the proposed project will impact ongoing activities in the Brazilian host institution and what the long-term projections are for the research partners and their institutions.
- any further relevant information
The letter of invitation can be in Portuguese or English. If the letter is in Portuguese, please submit a translated version and the original with your application.
You may be asked to participate in an interview as part of the in-country selection process.
We will interview candidates in English if we have questions about their projects or proposed affiliations.
The scholar will receive a fixed sum of US$5,000 per month to cover all expenses.
Scholars who opt for a Flex Award will receive US$2,400 for two international roundtrip tickets. Scholars on non-flex awards will receive US$1,500 for an international roundtrip ticket.
Information on the following website can help scholars figure out the cost of living, meals, and incidentals in different capital cities in Brazil. There can be significant differences in smaller towns, with lower prices in general: https://www.expatistan.com/cost-of-living/country/brazil
During their grant period, Fulbright U.S. Scholars in the Western Hemisphere (WHA) region may apply for a short-term regional travel grant for activities such as workshops, seminars, presentations, lectures, performances, exhibits, curricular advising and similar projects at institutions in eligible WHA countries. (Argentina, Bahamas, Barbados and Eastern Caribbean, Belize, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Guyana, Honduras, Jamaica, Mexico, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Suriname, Trinidad & Tobago and Uruguay).
The Regional Travel Program covers travel to and from the destination; lodging may be offered by the host institution. Scholars may only apply for this grant once they are in country on their Fulbright grant. Scholars who apply for the Flex award are ineligible for the Regional Travel Program. Additional information can be found on the Regional Travel Program website.
Final grant amounts will be determined prior to the start of the academic year and are subject to the availability of funds. The United States Department of State and the Fulbright Commission in the host country reserve the right to alter, without notice, participating countries, number of awards and allowances.
Brazil
To learn more about Fulbright U.S. Scholar awards in Brazil for 2026-27, please view our archived webinar and slides to hear directly from the Fulbright Commission, IIE staff and U.S. Scholar alums regarding award details, the scholar experience and application guidance.
Summary
Up to 40 awards are available in Brazil. This includes up to 30 All Disciplines awards for early and mid-career scholars, professionals, artists, and 10 Distinguished Scholar Awards in all regions in Brazil. The Distinguished Scholar Awards are opportunities for mid-career, senior academics, artists, and professionals with experience in Arts and Design, Medical Sciences, Social Innovation and Sustainability, and other disciplines.
Fulbright Interdisciplinary Network (FIN)
To foster meaningful discussions about contemporary issues in Brazil from a U.S. perspective, the Fulbright Commission and the U.S. Embassy in Brazil have established the Fulbright Interdisciplinary Network (FIN). This initiative provides Distinguished Scholars with the opportunity to connect with five Brazilian universities during their award period. Scholars can enhance their experience through online and in-person discussions, collaborating with faculty and advising students across Brazil.
Brazil is the fifth largest country in the world, and it is similar in size to the continental United States. It is also the largest country in South America and the largest Portuguese-speaking country globally, with around 211 million people and 43% living in its Southeast region. Agriculture, mining, manufacturing, and services are the most important economic sectors. In spite of poverty reduction achievements over the last decades, inequality remains at high levels in one of the world's largest democracies and economies.
After achieving universal coverage in primary education, Brazil is now struggling to improve the educational system's quality and outcomes, especially at the lower and upper secondary levels.
Brazil has a wide range of higher education institutions, with over 200 universities, as well as 3,472 master’s programs and doctoral programs with 122,000 graduate students. There are currently over 37,000 research groups around the country, with more than 200,000 researchers. Its leading research centers in agriculture, energy, biotechnology, environmental sciences, and epidemiology attract scholars and students worldwide. Brazil is considered by Times Higher Education as an emerging market in higher education in 2025. Additionally, Brazil is responsible for 52% of Latin American publications in indexed journals, which places the country as fourteenth worldwide by the Scimago Journal and Country Rank.
The extended coverage of Fulbright U.S. Programs in the country has been possible thanks to the significant contributions from Brazilian strategic partners such as the Brazilian Government through the Brazilian Federal Agency for Support and Evaluation of Graduate Education (CAPES).
U.S. Scholar 2023 Catherine Tinker in Porto Alegre, Brazil
Things turned out differently than planned for teaching my semester course at UFRGS-PPGD Law School and my research on freshwater governance.
Midway through my Fulbright US Scholar visit at UFRGS-PPGD, catastrophic flooding hit Porto Alegre, and the state of Rio Grande do Sul. The waters rose to historic levels right outside my door, roads were impassable, supplies ran low, and the international airport closed for months. Despite this challenge, my connection to Brazil deepened in personal and professional ways as part of the community.
My students remained in contact, and several offered me shelter and collected supplies for the rescue effort. The Fulbright Commission Brazil aided my evacuation, approved by my host university and the US Consulate. When classes resumed, we decided to publish our reflections and proposals. 200 years of diplomatic relations between Brazil and the US and the rising waters in my host city brought us closer in 2024.
U.S. Scholar Edmund Acevedo in Natal, Brazil
My Fulbright experience in Brazil is one of the most exciting, satisfying, and engaging learning/growing experiences in my career. I learned about different approaches to addressing research questions and conducting research in my field, as well as how culture and social context influence the perceived value of a research question. I also observed new strategies for working with and training students. Most importantly, I experienced the critical importance and value of collaboration and appreciated that there are often numerous valid perspectives on how to examine a research question that can often provide unexpected insight. I have thoroughly enjoyed meeting the people from Brazil and experiencing the food, culture, and natural environment in Natal and during my adventures throughout Brazil. My research collaborations with scientists in Brazil continue, and I have developed a study abroad program for students from my home institution to visit the faculty and students at my host institution in Brazil during the summer of 2025.
U.S. Scholar Theresa Robbins Dudeck
Blog from 2019-2020 U.S. Scholar to Brazil Theresa Robbins Dudeck in Theater Studies in Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais: https://www.theimprofessor.com/single-post/2019/11/29/impro-in-brazil-endings
Visit our Scholar Directory to view and search all Fulbright alumni. You can also learn more about Fulbright Alumni Ambassadors.
This award is funded by the Brazilian government, through its Federal Agency for Support and Evaluation of Graduate Education (CAPES).