What plug is used in Brazil?

In Brazil, the standard power plug is Type C and Type N. The country runs on 127/220 volts at 60 Hz. That means wall sockets in Brazil can be one of 2 different shapes — Type C, Type N, and your plug needs to physically match the socket to fit.

Coming from another country? Pick yours to see if you need an adapter.

Brazil

Type C
Two round pins (Europlug)
About Type C ↗
Type N
Two round pins + round ground
About Type N ↗

Home country

Select your home country above to see if you need an adapter.

Brazil
127/220 V
60 Hz

Travel adapters for Brazil

Most modern phones, laptops, cameras, and tablets are rated for 100–240 V, so you only need a simple plug-shape adapter when the voltage matches what your charger supports. Because Brazil runs at the higher 127/220 V range, travelers from the United States, Canada, or Japan must check the label on each device. Anything marked “120 V only” will be destroyed if plugged in without a step-down voltage converter. For a Type C/Type N socket, a universal travel adapter or a region-specific adapter is enough for chargers that handle dual voltage.

Frequently asked

What plug does Brazil use?

Brazil uses Type C and Type N plugs and runs at 127/220 volts, 60 Hz.

Do I need a travel adapter for Brazil?

Yes, if your home country does not use Type C and Type N. Most modern phone and laptop chargers handle 100–240 V, so a simple plug-shape adapter is enough.

What voltage is used in Brazil?

Mains voltage in Brazil is 127/220 V at 60 Hz.

Can I use my phone or laptop charger in Brazil?

Almost always yes. Modern phone, laptop, tablet and camera chargers are dual-voltage (rated 100–240 V), so they handle Brazil's 127/220 V automatically. You only need a plug-shape adapter, not a voltage converter. Check the small print on the charger to confirm.