Best Proxies for Brazil 2026 — DataImpulse banner cover
  • May 30, 2026
  • Andrii Byzov
  • General

Brazil is Latin America’s largest e-commerce economy, the world’s fastest-growing market for cross-border marketplaces, and one of the more interesting places to run scraping in 2026 — Mercado Livre defending nearly half the catalog, Shopee and Shein moving aggressively, iFood fencing data by exact delivery zone, Quinto Andar and ZAP Imóveis rate-limiting hard on listing pulls, and Vivo, Claro, and TIM running 95%+ of the mobile traffic. A US-IP scraper hitting Mercado Livre, Magalu, or Americanas looks nothing like a São Paulo shopper to those sites’ bot defenses, and that gap is exactly what a Brazil proxy stack closes. Whether your team is tracking prices on Mercado Livre and Magalu, monitoring brand health on Shopee BR, scraping job listings from Catho and Vagas, pulling rental data from Quinto Andar, or running Google.com.br SERP rank tracking, real Brazilian IPs and the right proxy type decide whether the data comes back clean or empty.

This guide ranks the 8 best proxies for Brazil in 2026, sorts out residential vs datacenter vs mobile vs ISP for Brazilian targets, and walks through full reviews. Jump to the quick comparison for a thirty-second shortlist; deeper coverage follows.


Key Facts

Brazil is its own proxy market because LGPD enforcement is intensifying, marketplaces defend their data hard, and São Paulo–Rio–Minas pricing/availability variation is real. Five things to know up front:

  • LGPD has teeth. The Lei Geral de Proteção de Dados (LGPD) has been actively enforced since 2020, with the ANPD imposing over R$98M (~USD 20M) in fines between 2023 and 2025. Maximum penalty: 2% of revenue or R$50M (~USD 9.3M) per violation. The ANPD’s published 2026-2027 priority topics (Resolution CD/ANPD No. 30) cover four axes: AI/emerging technologies, children and adolescents, biometric/health/financial data-subject rights, and public-sector personal-data processing — scraping falls under the AI + data-subject-rights overlap. A 2024 ANPD case fined Clearview AI R$9M for non-consensual facial-image scraping — one of the highest-profile scraping-related ANPD actions to date.
  • Mercado Livre dominates; Amazon and Magalu chase. Brazil’s e-commerce GMV is on track for ~USD 69B in 2026 (CAGR 16.87% to USD 151B by 2031). Mercado Livre holds ~47% market share excluding Asian platforms (or ~39% including Shopee/Shein/Temu), Amazon BR and Magalu each ~12%, Shopee ~14% (with-Asian view). The market is consolidating into 5–6 ecosystems combining marketplace + payments + logistics + advertising.
  • Anti-bot is tier-1 on the big marketplaces. Mercado Livre runs sophisticated behavioural scoring and CAPTCHAs; Magalu, Americanas, and Casas Bahia (Via) all have anti-scraper stacks; Shopee BR fingerprints aggressively; iFood and Rappi geo-fence by exact CEP (postal code). Datacenter IPs flag fast on the big-six.
  • Tier-2 and interior states are now half the market. São Paulo, Rio, Minas Gerais, Paraná, Rio Grande do Sul still concentrate spend, but Northeast and Centro-Oeste are the fastest-growing regions. State- and city-level geo targeting (SP, RJ, MG, BA, PE, CE, DF, PR, RS) is no longer optional for representative pricing data.
  • Three telcos own 95%+ of mobile traffic. Vivo (Telefônica Brasil) leads at ~38.8% (103M accesses, 23.1M 5G, 7.8M fiber home), Claro ~33% (~87M subscribers), TIM Brasil ~23% (per TIM Q1 2026 filing). Real Brazilian mobile and ISP IPs route through these ASNs — AS26599/AS18881 (Vivo), AS28573 (Claro NET), AS26615 (TIM), plus Oi, Algar, and Brisanet on residential fiber.

How We Selected These Brazil Proxies

We picked these 8 providers because they have credible Brazilian residential IP coverage, public pricing as of May 2026, and one or more documented features that matter for Brazilian marketplace and SERP work — city or state targeting (SP/RJ/MG/BA/DF), ASN selection on Vivo/Claro/TIM, sticky sessions long enough for Mercado Livre and Quinto Andar flows, or Brazil-specific ISP/static-residential lines. We weighed live PAYG residential price per GB, transparency of pricing, freshness of marketing claims, and ranking on independent Brazilian-market reviews. Providers without verifiable Brazil coverage, with stale pricing, or with no public success-rate disclosure were cut.


What Makes a Good Brazil Proxy?

A strong Brazil proxy stack solves four problems at once. Real ISP-assigned Brazilian IPs (Vivo Fibra, Claro NET, TIM Live, Oi Fibra, Algar, Brisanet) — without them, Mercado Livre, Magalu, Americanas, and Shopee BR all flag your traffic as non-resident. City- and state-level geo — São Paulo, Rio, Belo Horizonte, Brasília, Salvador, Fortaleza, Curitiba, Recife, Porto Alegre, Manaus pricing varies on Mercado Livre and quick-commerce; rank tracking on Google.com.br shifts by city; iFood/Rappi results are literally fenced by CEP. Sticky sessions long enough for multi-step flows on Quinto Andar, Catho, Mercado Pago, iFood, and Decolar without mid-session IP rotation that trips the fraud layer. PAYG or transparent volume pricing — Brazil work scales with shopping cycles (Black Friday — huge in Brazil, Dia das Mães, Natal, Liquida) so subscription lock-in hurts.


Quick Comparison: Best Proxies for Brazil at a Glance

Provider Best for Residential price Pool Brazil geo Notable
DataImpulse Best value, in-house teams $1/GB PAYG 90M+ residential, BR coverage Country free; state/city/ZIP/ASN 2× rate Traffic never expires; G2 4.8
Bright Data Enterprise + managed APIs ~$2.50/GB (50% promo); $5/GB regular 400M+ residential Country/city/ZIP/ASN free Mercado Livre / Amazon BR / Google.com.br Scraper APIs
Oxylabs SLA-grade enterprise from $6/GB 175M+ residential Country/state/city/ZIP/ASN/coords Web Scraper API; 99.95% success
Decodo Mid-market, BR ISP $3.75/GB starter, $8.50/GB PAYG 115M+ residential Country/city/ZIP/ASN included Brazil ISP from $0.27/IP (subject to inventory)
IPRoyal Long sticky sessions from $7.35/GB 32M+ residential Country/region/city/ISP Sticky up to 7 days
SOAX Mixed proxy types $3.60/GB Starter 155M+ res, 33M+ mobile, 2.6M+ ISP Country/region/city/ISP/ASN Unified credit; strong mobile BR
Webshare Cheap large volume from $3.50/mo res; $2.99/mo DC 80M+ residential (sub) Country, plan-dependent city Budget pick for low-defense Brazilian targets
NetNut ISP-residential reliability from $3.53/GB ISP-grade residential Country (city on higher plans) Vivo/Claro/TIM ISP depth

Brazil proxies: raw residential per-GB vs managed scraper APIs per-1K records (heterogeneous pricing units, 2026)


Which Proxy Type Should You Use for Brazil?

Brazilian market work behaves differently from generic Latin American scraping — major Brazilian marketplaces run tier-1 anti-bot stacks and content varies by state and CEP. The proxy type decides your success rate more than the brand does.

Residential Proxies

Residential proxies are the right default for nearly all serious Brazilian market work — Mercado Livre, Amazon BR, Magalu, Americanas, Shopee BR, Casas Bahia, Submarino, Shein BR product pages and search results; Quinto Andar, Loft, ZAP Imóveis, Viva Real, OLX BR listings; Catho, Vagas.com, LinkedIn BR job pages; Decolar, Hurb, CVC travel flows; news and sentiment scraping on Folha, Globo, UOL, Estadão. Real Vivo Fibra, Claro NET, TIM Live, Oi Fibra, Algar IPs read as ordinary Brazilian consumer browsers to the marketplace bot defense, and a fresh Brazilian residential pool routinely clears the layer where datacenter ranges flag in minutes.

ISP / Static Residential Proxies

ISP proxies (static residential) are increasingly the right choice for Brazilian workflows that need session continuity — Mercado Livre Vendedor dashboards, signed-in LinkedIn BR work, Sales Navigator on Brazilian prospects, multi-day rank tracking on Google.com.br, Catho recruiter accounts, Mercado Pago integrations. ISP IPs sit on Brazilian ISP-assigned addresses with the stability of static hosting: residential trust with the predictability of a fixed address. Decodo, IPRoyal, Bright Data, and NetNut all offer Brazil ISP product lines.

Mobile Proxies

Mobile proxies route through real Brazilian carrier networks (Vivo, Claro, TIM) and earn their place when you’re validating mobile Brazilian marketplace experiences, mobile-only promotions on Mercado Livre and Magalu, mobile-app iFood and Rappi surfaces, Shopee BR in-app pricing, or hard geo/account cases where residential rotation gets challenged. With Brazil’s mobile-first internet (Vivo alone ~103M accesses), a Vivo or Claro mobile IP often looks more native than a fixed-line residential IP. They’re the most expensive option per GB, so reserve them for jobs where mobile context genuinely changes the data.

Datacenter Proxies

Datacenter proxies have a narrow but real role in Brazilian work: bulk crawling of public Brazilian government and corporate sites (dados.gov.br, Receita Federal CNPJ lookup, CVM filings, public IBGE data) with no serious bot protection, sitemap aggregation, public news archive crawling, and lightweight enrichment of CSV exports. Don’t lean on datacenter for Mercado Livre, Amazon BR, Magalu, Shopee, or iFood — these flag datacenter ranges within a few hundred requests. Reserve datacenter for the low-defense layer of a Brazilian stack, and switch to residential or ISP as soon as a target starts challenging you.

Rotating vs Sticky for Brazil

The rule for Brazil: rotate for breadth, stick for depth and account continuity. Rotating residential handles broad Mercado Livre and Amazon BR price-tracking sweeps, Google.com.br SERP rank tracking, Magalu category monitoring, and Shopee/Shein catalog scrapes. Sticky sessions handle the deeper flows — Quinto Andar multi-page listing crawls, iFood/Rappi delivery-zone validation by CEP, Decolar fare sequences, Catho recruiter sequences, LinkedIn BR Sales Navigator searches, Mercado Livre Vendedor dashboards, and any flow where mid-session IP changes would flag as suspicious. Most production Brazil stacks mix both.


Best Proxies for Brazil — Full Reviews

The picks below are ranked on value for Brazilian market work — the balance of Brazil IP pool depth, state/city precision, marketplace success rate, sticky-session length, LGPD posture, and price per successful record. DataImpulse leads on value; the rest each win a specific lane.


1. DataImpulse

DataImpulse is the best-value pick for in-house teams running their own Brazilian market scrapers — Mercado Livre price tracking, Amazon BR competitive monitoring, Magalu/Americanas assortment intelligence, Catho recruiting research, Google.com.br SERP rank tracking, news and brand sentiment. Residential starts at $1/GB, pay-as-you-go, with traffic that never expires — a fraction of what enterprise Brazil-market scrapers charge. The pool is 90M+ ethically sourced IPs across 195 countries with credible Brazilian residential depth (Brazil is consistently among the top-published country pools for DataImpulse). Country targeting is included with state/city/ZIP/ASN as a paid add-on (2× the per-GB rate), which matters for Brazilian work where São Paulo vs Rio vs Recife pricing on Mercado Livre actually differs and iFood/Rappi results change by CEP. It supports HTTP, HTTPS, and SOCKS5, rotating and sticky sessions, full API access, and standard scraping stacks (Scrapy, Selenium, Playwright). Mobile is available at $2/GB for Vivo/Claro/TIM networks; datacenter at $0.50/GB for the enrichment layer (dados.gov.br, news archives, public CVM filings).

What makes it the default for serious Brazilian collection is the price-to-geo ratio. At $1/GB you can sustain continuous Brazilian market work across all nine major metro clusters without the per-record charges that managed APIs add up to at scale, and the PAYG model means experimenting with new Brazilian targets — Shopee, Shein, Temu, Casas Bahia — doesn’t lock you into a subscription. Support is 24/7 human; published success rate is 99.51%; G2 is 4.8/5. There’s no dedicated Brazilian marketplace endpoint here — DataImpulse sells the proxy infrastructure cleanly and lets your team build the Mercado Livre / Magalu / Americanas parsers on top.

Quick specs — Types: residential, mobile, datacenter · Pool: 90M+ residential with BR coverage · Rotation: rotating + sticky · Geo: country (state/city/ZIP/ASN as paid add-on at 2× rate) · Price: $1/GB res, $0.50/GB DC, $2/GB mobile · Published success: 99.51% · Rating: G2 4.8.
Best for: in-house Brazilian scraping teams that want low pay-as-you-go pricing and state/city-level geo without enterprise commitments.


2. Bright Data

Bright Data is the enterprise pick if you want Brazilian market data as a managed product. Beyond raw residential at $5/GB pay-as-you-go (currently discounted to ~$2.50/GB with a 50% promo) with a 400M+ monthly IP pool that includes substantial Brazilian coverage and free city/ZIP/ASN targeting, Bright Data ships dedicated Scraper APIs for Mercado Livre, Amazon BR, Google.com.br SERP, Magalu, and other Brazilian marketplaces at $1.50 per 1,000 records on PAYG (about $1.30/1K on the $499 plan). The Web Unlocker at $1.50/1K results handles protected Brazilian targets generically. ISO 27001, SOC 2 Type II, documented GDPR/LGPD-aligned compliance, and audit-ready documentation clear most Brazilian enterprise procurement and most ANPD risk reviews. It’s the right call when you’d rather hit a managed Brazilian marketplace endpoint than maintain a parser against Mercado Livre’s DOM churn — at enterprise pricing with procurement-style buying.

Quick specs — Types: residential, DC, ISP, mobile + dedicated Brazilian marketplace Scraper APIs + Web Unlocker · Pool: 400M+ monthly residential with strong Brazilian coverage · Rotation: rotating, sticky, dedicated · Geo: country/city/ZIP/ASN free · Price: ~$2.50/GB res (promo); $5/GB regular; Scraper APIs from $1.50/1K records PAYG (~$1.30/1K on $499 plan); subscription from $499/month · Compliance: ISO 27001, SOC 2 Type II.
Best for: enterprise Brazilian market intelligence teams that want managed scraper APIs with audit-ready compliance and SLA controls.


3. Oxylabs

Oxylabs sits next to Bright Data at the enterprise top with deep Brazilian market coverage. Residential starts around $6/GB on the entry plan with a 175M+ pool across 195 countries and strong Brazilian presence with city, state, ZIP, ASN, and geographical coordinate targeting. The Web Scraper API ($49/month entry) handles JavaScript rendering, anti-bot bypass, and structured data extraction across Brazilian targets including Mercado Livre, Amazon BR, and Google.com.br. Sessions are flexible with unlimited concurrent connections, and Oxylabs publishes a 99.95% residential success rate. Pick Oxylabs when reliability, SLA-grade support, ISO 27001 / SOC 2 compliance, and audit-ready documentation matter more than entry price — particularly for Brazil enterprise programs that need procurement docs for LGPD risk reviews.

Quick specs — Types: residential, DC, ISP, mobile + Web Scraper API · Pool: 175M+ residential, 195 countries · Rotation: flexible, sticky, unlimited concurrency · Geo: country/state/city/ZIP/coordinates/ASN · Price: from $6/GB residential; Web Scraper API from $49/month · Published success: 99.95% · Compliance: ISO 27001, SOC 2.
Best for: enterprise Brazilian market programs that want SLA-grade managed scraping with deep geo targeting and audit-ready compliance.


4. Decodo

Decodo (formerly Smartproxy) is the mid-market sweet spot for Brazilian market work. Residential proxies start at $3.75/GB on the 3 GB starter plan with PAYG at $8.50/GB on the public pricing page, dropping to about $2/GB at the 1,000 GB tier. The static residential/ISP starts at $0.27/IP (Brazil availability subject to plan/inventory) — one of the most aggressive Brazil ISP rates on the market for static-residential workflows like Mercado Livre Vendedor, Catho recruiter accounts, and signed-in LinkedIn BR. Country, city, ZIP, and ASN targeting are included with 115M+ IPs across 195+ locations. The Web Scraping API includes templates for Brazilian marketplaces, with sticky sessions configurable up to 24 hours — useful for Decolar and Quinto Andar multi-page flows.

Quick specs — Types: residential, DC, ISP, mobile + Web Scraping API · Pool: 115M+ residential · Rotation: per-request, sticky up to 24h · Geo: country/city/ZIP/ASN included · Price: $3.75/GB starter, $8.50/GB PAYG, $2/GB at 1TB+; static residential/ISP from $0.27/IP (BR subject to inventory) · Published success: 99.86%.
Best for: mid-market Brazilian teams that want city-precise residential and cheap Brazil ISP for account-tied work.


5. IPRoyal

IPRoyal earns its spot for Brazilian workflows that need long sticky sessions — multi-day rank tracking on Google.com.br, multi-page Quinto Andar and ZAP Imóveis crawls, Brazilian LinkedIn account continuity, Catho recruiter sequences. Residential PAYG runs $7.35/GB at entry (cheaper at volume) with a 32M+ pool across 195+ countries including Brazilian coverage, with country, region, city, and ISP targeting. Its real differentiator is sticky sessions up to 7 days, the longest on this list — uniquely useful for Decolar multi-day fare watches, real-estate listing tracking, and Catho/LinkedIn BR workflows where a single session needs to persist across days. There’s also a Brazil ISP product line and Web Unblocker (CAPTCHA + anti-bot bypass) at per-request pricing.

Quick specs — Types: residential, ISP, mobile, DC + Web Unblocker · Pool: 32M+ residential, 195+ countries · Rotation: rotating, sticky up to 7 days · Geo: country/region/city/ISP · Price: from $7.35/GB residential PAYG.
Best for: Brazilian workflows that need multi-day sticky sessions (Quinto Andar, Decolar, recruiting on Catho/LinkedIn BR, signed-in dashboards).


6. SOAX

SOAX is the pick when geo-precise Brazilian work and mixed proxy types matter together. Residential starts at $3.60/GB on the Starter plan (25 GB included), and the unified credit model means you can spend the same budget on residential, mobile, ISP, datacenter, or the Web Data API. The pool is one of the larger in the mid-tier — 155M+ residential, 33M+ mobile, 2.6M+ ISP — with country, region, city, ISP, and ASN targeting including Brazil coverage. Sticky sessions are supported across all proxy types. Convenient if your Brazilian program mixes mobile validation of Mercado Livre and Shopee BR apps (where Vivo/Claro/TIM context changes pricing and assortment) with residential for desktop Amazon BR tracking and ISP for Brazilian Vendedor dashboards.

Quick specs — Types: residential, mobile, ISP, DC + Web Data API · Pool: 155M+ residential, 33M+ mobile, 2.6M+ ISP · Rotation: per request or interval, sticky supported · Geo: country/region/city/ISP/ASN · Price: $3.60/GB Starter.
Best for: Brazilian teams running geo-heavy collection across multiple proxy types under one subscription.


7. Webshare

Webshare earns its place for Brazilian teams running large-volume low-cost workflows on public Brazilian targets — news archive crawling, public Brazilian government/corporate sites without serious anti-bot, sitemap aggregation, and public-data enrichment (dados.gov.br, Receita Federal lookups, public PDFs). Plans start at $2.99/month for the 100-proxy datacenter package and $3.50/month for the entry rotating residential plan with 80M+ residential available on higher tiers, plus static Brazil ISP proxies on subscription plans. Webshare residential is best on lower-defense Brazilian targets; for tier-1 anti-bot sites (Mercado Livre, Amazon BR, Magalu, Shopee), step up to the providers above.

Quick specs — Types: residential, static ISP, datacenter · Pool: 80M+ residential (subscription); datacenter and ISP available · Geo: country, plan-dependent city · Price: from $2.99/month datacenter (100 proxies); rotating residential from $3.50/month.
Best for: Brazilian teams running cheap large-volume crawling of public Brazilian websites without tier-1 anti-bot.


8. NetNut

NetNut closes the list with a focus on ISP-residential reliability for Brazilian workflows. The product line emphasizes ISP-grade residential IPs (Vivo, Claro, TIM, Oi, Algar, and other Brazilian ISP-assigned addresses) with rotating and sticky options. Rotating residential currently starts around $3.53/GB on entry plans, scaling up by volume; country and city-level targeting available on higher tiers. NetNut is the pick when you specifically want Vivo/Claro/TIM ISP-residential network depth without paying full Bright Data prices.

Quick specs — Types: ISP-residential, residential, mobile · Pool: ISP-grade residential with Brazilian coverage · Rotation: rotating, sticky · Geo: country (city on higher plans) · Price: from $3.53/GB residential.
Best for: Brazilian teams that want Vivo/Claro/TIM ISP-residential reliability for marketplace and LinkedIn BR work without enterprise pricing.


How Much Do Brazil Proxies Cost?

Listed pricing in 2026 falls into three bands. Budget/value at $1–$3.75/GB — DataImpulse, SOAX Starter, Decodo entry, Webshare residential subscription — covers most in-house Brazilian market work. Mid/premium at $3.50–$7.35/GB — Bright Data, Oxylabs, IPRoyal, NetNut — adds enterprise tooling and SLA-grade reliability. API-priced and ISP-priced — Bright Data’s Brazilian marketplace Scraper APIs $1.50/1K records PAYG (~$1.30/1K on $499 plan), Oxylabs Web Scraper API from $49/mo, Decodo Web Scraping API from $19/mo, Decodo Brazil ISP at $0.27/IP — sell structured Brazilian outcomes per record, per plan, or per IP instead of per GB.

The real cost question for Brazil isn’t “what’s the lowest R$/GB” but “what’s the lowest cost per successful, LGPD-defensible record”. A managed scraper API at $1.30–$1.50/1K records can beat $1/GB residential when your in-house scraper hits Mercado Livre or Shopee blocks on 30–50% of requests; conversely, $1/GB residential paired with sticky sessions and city-level geo routinely beats per-record APIs at scale once your in-house parser is mature and your LGPD documentation is in order. Test both on your actual Brazilian targets before committing.


Is Scraping Legal in Brazil?

Brazilian scraping law sits at the intersection of LGPD, the Marco Civil da Internet (Law 12.965/2014), the Constitution (Article 5 — privacy), the Copyright Act (Lei 9.610/1998), and individual marketplace terms. The basics:

  • LGPD governs personal data. The Lei Geral de Proteção de Dados (Law 13.709/2018, in force August 2020) covers names, emails, phone numbers, CPF, photos, and other personal data of Brazilian residents. Scraping requires a legal basis under Article 7 (legitimate interest, consent, etc.). The ANPD has imposed over R$98M in fines between 2023 and 2025, including a R$9M Clearview AI fine for non-consensual facial-image collection from Brazilian sources. Maximum penalty: 2% of revenue or R$50M per violation.
  • ANPD’s 2026-2027 priority topics cover AI/emerging tech, children’s data, biometric/health/financial data-subject rights, and public-sector processing (Resolution CD/ANPD No. 30). Scraping sits at the intersection of the AI and data-subject-rights axes — production pipelines should assume eventual inspection, particularly where AI-training or biometric data is involved.
  • Marco Civil da Internet (Law 12.965/2014) sets internet civil-rights framework — neutrality, freedom of expression, intermediary liability. In June 2025, the Supreme Court partially struck down Article 19’s intermediary-liability shield for platforms (effect: platforms now have a qualified duty of care for illegal content). This doesn’t directly change scraping law but shifts the platform-liability backdrop that ToS enforcement runs on.
  • Public-data scraping is contested. Brazilian courts have not produced a clear precedent equivalent to hiQ v LinkedIn. Marketplace ToS prohibiting automated access are enforceable under Brazilian contract law (Código Civil) and the consumer code (CDC). Commercial intent + violation of express ToS strengthens civil claims against scrapers.
  • Copyright Act (Lei 9.610/1998) protects creative content. Brazil does not have EU-style database rights, but scraped catalogs of creative content (product photography, editorial reviews, news articles) carry copyright exposure.

The honest reading: large-scale commercial Brazilian market collection is widespread industry practice, but LGPD enforcement is intensifying with scraping on the ANPD’s 2026-2027 priority list. Public price/product data is the lowest-risk lane; personal data and logged-in scraping the highest. Get Brazilian counsel familiar with LGPD and the ANPD’s enforcement posture before scaling. This isn’t legal advice.


How to Start Brazil Market Scraping with DataImpulse

  1. Create an account and pick your proxy mix. Residential ($1/GB) for Mercado Livre, Amazon BR, Magalu, Americanas, Shopee BR, Quinto Andar, Catho, Google.com.br SERP and news; datacenter ($0.50/GB) for enrichment (dados.gov.br, Receita Federal, public CVM filings, news archives); mobile ($2/GB) for Vivo/Claro/TIM mobile-marketplace validation (where Mercado Livre and Shopee often show different pricing).
  2. Add funds. Pay-as-you-go, no subscription, no expiry — handy because Brazilian market collection volume varies with shopping cycles (Black Friday — the biggest Brazilian retail event, Dia das Mães, Dia dos Pais, Natal, Liquida), reporting cycles, and competitive-intel campaigns.
  3. Target by state and rotate. Set country BR plus state/city for the Brazilian markets you’re collecting (state/city/ZIP/ASN are paid add-ons at 2× the per-GB rate but essential for serious Brazilian work — pricing on Mercado Livre and Magalu varies by metro, iFood/Rappi results by CEP, Google.com.br SERP by city), pick rotating for broad Mercado Livre and Amazon BR sweeps and sticky sessions for Quinto Andar, Decolar, and LinkedIn BR flows, point your scraper at the proxy endpoint and run.

For more on related workflows, see our residential proxies product page, the Brazil residential proxies landing, the best proxies for Amazon scraping roundup (Amazon BR mechanics carry over), and the best proxies for SEO & rank tracking roundup.


FAQ

Is scraping legal in Brazil?

LGPD (Law 13.709/2018) governs personal data of Brazilian residents from August 2020; ANPD has imposed over R$98M in fines between 2023 and 2025, including a R$9M Clearview AI fine for facial-image collection. Maximum penalty: 2% of revenue or R$50M per violation. Marco Civil (Law 12.965/2014) sets the broader civil-rights framework. Marketplace ToS prohibiting scraping are enforceable under Brazilian contract law (Código Civil and CDC). Public price and product data is the lowest-risk lane; personal data and logged-in scraping the highest. ANPD’s 2026-2027 priority axes (AI/emerging tech, children, biometric/health/financial rights, public-sector processing) put scraping at the intersection of AI and data-subject-rights enforcement. Get LGPD counsel before scaling. This isn’t legal advice.

What are the best proxies for Mercado Livre, Amazon BR, and Magalu?

Residential proxies with state or city-level Brazilian geo are the safest default. Mercado Livre runs aggressive behavioural fingerprinting; Amazon BR inherits Amazon’s global anti-bot stack with BR rate-limits; Magalu uses CAPTCHAs and IP scoring. Resilient scraping needs either DataImpulse residential at $1/GB paired with a mature in-house parser or Bright Data’s dedicated Mercado Livre / Amazon BR Scraper APIs at $1.50/1K records. Decodo’s Brazil ISP at $0.27/IP (subject to inventory) is among the cheapest entries to static-residential for Vendedor and account-tied work.

How do I scrape Mercado Livre or iFood from Brazil?

Use residential proxies with country = BR plus city targeting matching your target metro (São Paulo, Rio, Belo Horizonte, Brasília, Curitiba). Set User-Agent and Accept-Language to typical Brazilian Chrome/Android values (pt-BR), sticky-session for category browse-to-product flows, and rotate IPs between product pulls. iFood and Rappi fence delivery by exact CEP (8-digit Brazilian postal code), so CEP-accurate geo is gating. Honor robots.txt and rate-limits, and treat any personal data with LGPD-grade care.

Do I need São Paulo or Rio-specific IPs?

Yes for pricing intelligence, SERP tracking, and quick-commerce work. Mercado Livre and Magalu prices vary across São Paulo (SP), Rio (RJ), Belo Horizonte (MG), and other tier-1 metros. iFood, Rappi, and 99 literally fence catalog and pricing by exact CEP — a Paulista IP shows São Paulo restaurants and São Paulo prices, never Rio. Google.com.br SERP rankings shift by city. DataImpulse, Bright Data, Oxylabs, Decodo, IPRoyal, and SOAX all support city-level targeting on Brazilian residential pools (paid add-on or included depending on plan).

Mobile proxies for Brazilian targets — when do they matter?

Three cases: (1) mobile-app or mobile-web validation on Mercado Livre, Amazon BR, Magalu, Shopee BR where Vivo/Claro/TIM context surfaces different pricing or app-only promos; (2) iFood, Rappi, 99 — these are mobile-first and tag Vivo/Claro/TIM mobile IPs as native; (3) protection-bypass on the hardest accounts. SOAX, IPRoyal, DataImpulse, and Bright Data offer Vivo/Claro/TIM-routed mobile proxies. Reserve mobile for jobs where mobile context genuinely changes the data — they cost more per GB.

How does LGPD enforcement affect scraping plans?

ANPD’s 2026-2027 priority topics (Resolution CD/ANPD No. 30) put scraping at the intersection of AI/emerging tech and data-subject-rights enforcement. The R$9M Clearview AI fine (2024, facial-image scraping) is one of the highest-profile scraping-related actions to date; expect more enforcement through 2026-2027, particularly for AI-training and biometric use cases. Production pipelines should assume eventual ANPD inspection: maintain a documented LGPD legal basis (typically legitimate interest balancing) for each scraping use case, keep records of processing activities, and avoid personal-data scraping without a defensible justification. Public marketplace/catalog data has materially lower risk than personal-data scraping.

Can I use a free Brazil proxy or VPN instead?

For development tests on public Mercado Livre catalog pages, yes. For production Brazilian market work, no — free proxies are typically shared, datacenter-class, already burned on the major Brazilian marketplaces, and offer no LGPD-defensible audit trail. They also fail on Mercado Livre’s behavioural fingerprinting and on iFood/Rappi CEP-based fencing. The paid providers above start at $1/GB PAYG with no subscription, which makes free proxies an expensive false economy for any commercial use.

Static residential / ISP proxies for Brazil — who has them?

Decodo (from $0.27/IP, subject to inventory), IPRoyal, NetNut, Bright Data, and Webshare all sell Brazil static-residential / ISP product lines. They’re the right choice for Mercado Livre Vendedor dashboards, signed-in LinkedIn BR, Sales Navigator on Brazilian prospects, multi-day Google.com.br rank tracking, Catho recruiter accounts, and Mercado Pago integrations. Pick ISP when you need session continuity that residential rotation breaks.

What about Shopee, Shein, and Temu in Brazil?

These cross-border platforms have grown aggressively in 2024-2026 — Shopee around 14% of Brazilian e-commerce GMV when Asian platforms are included, with Shein and Temu close behind in fashion and household categories. Anti-bot on Shopee BR is tier-1 (aggressive fingerprinting); Shein and Temu are slightly easier but still need residential + city geo for representative pricing. Residential or ISP from any of DataImpulse, Bright Data, Oxylabs, Decodo, SOAX handle them; managed Scraper APIs are not always available for these platforms specifically, so in-house parsing is the typical approach.


Ready to run Brazilian market scraping with the city- and state-level geo precision that Mercado Livre, Amazon BR, Magalu, iFood, and Google.com.br tracking actually need? Start with DataImpulse — residential from $1/GB, datacenter from $0.50/GB, mobile from $2/GB, pay-as-you-go with country targeting included (state/city/ZIP/ASN as paid add-on) and traffic that never expires.