Brazil’s insurance framework law (Law 15,040/2024), effective December 11, 2025, launched the most comprehensive overhaul of Brazil’s US$132 billion insurance market in two decades — and carriers, brokers, and reinsurers still have a narrow window to align their operations with its 134 articles before SUSEP’s enforcement calendar intensifies. The law consolidates a framework long dispersed across the Civil Code, consumer protection statutes, and administrative circulars into a single statutory regime, resetting the legal baseline for every participant in the market.
What Law 15,040 Consolidates — and What It Eliminates
The new law replaces ad hoc jurisprudence with explicit statutory rules on policy interpretation, tacit renewal, and ambiguity resolution. Where policy language is unclear, the benefit of the doubt now runs to the insured — not the insurer — codifying what courts had been applying inconsistently. The statute also formalizes the treatment of exclusion clauses: they must be printed in bold or highlighted, and the insurer bears the burden of proving the exclusion applies. For carriers still relying on legacy wordings drafted before 2024, compliance requires a complete policy portfolio review.
Simultaneously, Complementary Law 213/2025 (January 15, 2025) legalized mutual protection societies and expanded insurance cooperatives into all branches except those explicitly restricted by the Conselho Nacional de Seguros Privados (CNSP). Brazil now has three distinct distribution tracks — traditional carriers, cooperatives, and mutual entities — each with separate licensing requirements, capital thresholds, and SUSEP oversight obligations. The SUSEP regulatory calendar for 2025–2026 shows implementing resolutions still pending for mutual entity prudential standards and reinsurance conduct rules.
The 120-Day Claims Clock: New Liability Exposure for Carriers
The single most operationally disruptive provision is the 120-day statutory deadline for large commercial risk claims adjustments. If a carrier fails to render a final decision within the deadline, it forfeits the right to deny the claim — a strict consequence that transforms claims workflows from a discretionary process into a compliance calendar. Insurers must now log every claim receipt date, appoint loss adjusters within defined timelines, and maintain auditable records of each milestone.
For international carriers operating branches or subsidiaries in Brazil, the 120-day clock is compounded by cross-border documentation requirements: evidence gathering from foreign jurisdictions, translation obligations, and reinsurance recovery timelines must all fit within the statutory window. Insurers that have not yet updated their claims management systems to enforce the 120-day trigger are at immediate risk of creating valid, uncontestable claims — regardless of underlying policy coverage.
The Brazilian market recorded 42 M&A transactions in the insurance sector in 2024, a 27% year-on-year increase, partly driven by smaller carriers unable to bear the technology and compliance investment required by the new law. Those consolidation pressures are expected to accelerate through 2026, as the gap between well-resourced and under-capitalized carriers widens. Brazil’s capital requirements under Law 15,040 also introduce risk-based capital categories — S1 through S3 — with minimum base capital of R$15 million for nationwide carriers, reinforcing the case for consolidation over standalone compliance investment.
Cooperatives, Mutuals, and the New Distribution Battleground
The entry of mutual protection societies and expanded cooperatives into the market is the provision with the longest-range strategic implications. Brazil’s 100,000-plus licensed brokers now face direct competition from cooperative entities that can write all lines of business except those prohibited by CNSP — and that can originate policies without the intermediary layer that brokers depend on for their commission economics. Cooperatives also benefit from a more flexible capital structure, enabling them to undercut on price in standard personal and SME lines.
Broker consolidators are responding. Alper Seguros, among the most active acquirers, targeted R$400 million in broker acquisitions by end-2025, a trajectory that mirrors the broader regional dynamic: as international carriers rationalize LATAM distributions, broker roll-ups are capturing the mid-market before cooperative entrants can disintermediate it. The same pattern is visible elsewhere in the region — Everest Group’s exit from Colombia and AIG’s entry illustrate how the mid-market LATAM insurance map is being redrawn by consolidation pressure.
Reinsurance Governance and the Implications for Cross-Border Risk Transfer
Law 15,040 introduces new mandatory reinsurance governance provisions: tacit acceptance of reinsurance proposals within 20 days, immediate claim notification to reinsurers upon first notice from the insured, and an explicit “Follow the Fortune” principle requiring reinsurers to follow cedant settlements unless fraud or material misrepresentation is proven. For Lloyd’s syndicates, Bermuda market participants, and European reinsurers with Brazilian cedants, these rules require back-to-back coverage mapping and faster claims reporting protocols than most existing treaties specify.
The law’s treatment of reinsurance brokers is equally precise: they may not collect premiums, establish employment relationships with cooperative entities, or manage mutual funds. The R$10 million minimum professional liability (E&O) insurance requirement for reinsurance brokers — a first in Brazilian law — will push smaller intermediaries toward merger or withdrawal. For alternative capital providers already active in the market — Brazil’s domestic ILS regime now has four active issuances, including Galapagos Capital’s landmark R$126M LRS — the new capital categories and ORSA requirements create both a compliance burden and a product development opportunity as demand for parametric structures grows to meet the new solvency math.