Markets · Agribusiness
—The surge. Lenders auctioned 14,219 repossessed farms across Brazil in 2025, about 30% more than the year before.
—The debt. Problem rural loans have more than quadrupled in two years to over R$171 billion ($34 billion), central bank data show.
—The default rate. Delinquency on farm loans has jumped to 19.6%, from just 5.5% two years earlier.
—The squeeze. Low grain prices, very high interest rates, costly inputs and climate shocks have hit farmers all at once.
—The map. The grain states of Mato Grosso, Goiás and Paraná account for most of the bankruptcy filings.
—The stakes. Banks now hold almost all of the value of the bad rural debt, leaving lenders exposed to the cycle.
A record wave of Brazil farmland auctions is turning a quiet credit crisis in the countryside into a visible contest over who ends up owning some of the world’s most valuable agricultural land.
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Brazil farmland auctions hit a record
For years Brazil’s farm belt was a one-way bet. Land prices climbed, harvests broke records, and credit flowed freely to anyone willing to plant.
That cycle has now turned, and the clearest sign is at auction.
Lenders seized and auctioned more than fourteen thousand rural properties across Brazil last year, according to data from a specialist auction aggregator shared with Reuters. That was roughly thirty percent more than the year before.
The route that bypasses the courts grew fastest. Out-of-court seizures, where a lender enforces collateral directly, nearly doubled to around two thousand four hundred properties as banks turned more aggressive.
This is the part of the story usually hidden from view. The bankruptcies and missed payments make the headlines, but the auctions are where the losses become permanent and land actually changes hands.
A debt pile that quadrupled
Behind the auctions sits a fast-growing mountain of bad debt. Problem loans in Brazil’s rural credit system have more than quadrupled in two years, reaching over R$171 billion, equivalent to about $34 billion.
That figure, from the central bank, counts loans that are unpaid, rescheduled or renegotiated. The share of farm loans in arrears has climbed to nearly a fifth, from only about five and a half percent two years earlier.
The squeeze came from several directions at once. Prices for soy and corn softened, while interest rates stayed near their highest in two decades and the cost of imported inputs rose sharply.
Weather did the rest. Drought and flooding battered harvests, with Rio Grande do Sul hit especially hard after catastrophic floods in 2024, and farmers now brace for a feared intense El Niño that could cut yields again.
Who is feeling the pain
The damage is concentrated in the heart of the grain economy. The producing states of Mato Grosso, Goiás and Paraná together account for more than half of the bankruptcy-style filings by individual farmers.
Those filings are climbing too. According to the credit bureau Serasa Experian, individual producers lodged well over eight hundred court-protection requests last year, around half as many again as the year before.
A government official captured the mood bluntly. The agriculture ministry’s farm-policy secretary, Guilherme Campos, told Reuters that this moment of indebtedness in the countryside is extremely delicate.
Why the banks are exposed
The crisis does not stop at the farm gate. Serasa data show that while banks account for less than half of new defaults by number, they hold almost all of the value of the overdue rural debt, close to ninety-four percent of it.
That concentration is why the country’s largest farm lenders have been hit. Banco do Brasil, the biggest, has seen profits fall as it sets aside more money for bad loans, and Santander’s Brazilian arm has flagged the same strain.
Lenders have responded by lending less and demanding more. The average loan per borrower has shrunk, banks want stronger collateral, and some now keep the land title until a debt is fully repaid.
Why it matters for investors
For outsiders, a wave of forced sales in a prime farm belt is also an opening. Distressed land sold below its boom-era value is exactly the kind of asset that draws funds hunting for cheap entry into a recovering sector.
Brazil is already a laboratory for financial farmland investment, through listed agricultural funds known as Fiagros. The government is even studying a version aimed at indebted land, where creditors take a stake and the farmer stays on as a tenant with the right to buy back in.
The catch is access. Foreign buyers face limits on how much rural land they can own, the legal process around seized farms can be slow and contested, and a distressed farm is only a bargain if the next harvest pays off.
The bigger signal is about the cycle itself. Officials insist this is an adjustment rather than a collapse, but until grain prices firm and rates fall, the auctions are likely to keep coming.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why are Brazil farmland auctions surging?
Lenders are seizing more farms as rural defaults climb. Low grain prices, very high interest rates, costly inputs and climate shocks have pushed many producers into arrears, and banks are increasingly enforcing the land put up as collateral.
How big is Brazil’s rural debt problem?
Problem loans in the rural credit system have more than quadrupled in two years to over R$171 billion, about $34 billion. The share of farm loans in arrears has risen to nearly a fifth, from roughly five percent two years earlier.
Can foreign investors buy the distressed land?
In principle yes, but with limits. Brazil caps how much rural land foreign entities can own, the process around seized farms can be slow, and the government is studying funds that let creditors take stakes in indebted land while the farmer stays on as a tenant.
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