USD/BRL Exchange Rate History: Real per Dollar Since 1995
USD/BRL exchange rate history (real per dollar) — Federal Reserve H.10 via FRED, daily since 1995. From the post-Plano Real band through the 1999 float to the 2015 slump. CSV and Excel, free.
The Brazilian real was born in 1994 from the Plano Real, the stabilisation plan that ended hyperinflation. This dataset tracks the Federal Reserve H.10 rate, expressed as Brazilian reais per US dollar, distributed via FRED under the code DEXBZUS, with daily coverage since 1995. A higher number means a stronger dollar and a weaker real.
Dataset: USD/BRL Exchange Rate (1995–2026) · Updated 2026-05-29
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Source: Federal Reserve Board · H.10 Foreign Exchange Rates (via FRED)
Macro Takeaway
The real is a high-carry, high-volatility commodity currency, swinging with Brazil’s fiscal politics, commodity exports, and the global rate cycle. It is one of the most actively traded EM currencies in the broad dollar complex.
The defining breaks were the January 1999 float and devaluation (ending the post-Plano-Real crawling band), and the 2012-2016 stretch of recession, the Petrobras scandal, and impeachment, which drove the real sharply weaker. It has stayed weak and volatile since, moving with other EM currencies such as USD/ZAR and USD/MXN.
Dataset Overview
| Indicator | USD/BRL Exchange Rate (1995–2026) |
|---|---|
| Quotation | BRL per USD — Brazilian reais per US dollar; a higher value means a stronger dollar and a weaker real |
| Geography | Brazil / United States |
| Frequency | Daily (business days) |
| Period | 1995–2026 |
| Variables | Date, exchange rate (BRL per USD) |
| Format | CSV, Excel (XLSX) |
| Sources | Federal Reserve Board — H.10 Foreign Exchange Rates (FRED series DEXBZUS) |
| Last updated | — |
Dataset Variables
The CSV and Excel files contain the following columns. Each row represents one business day.
| Column | Type | Description |
|---|---|---|
date | Date (YYYY-MM-DD) | Observation date (business day) |
usd_brl | Float | USD/BRL exchange rate, BRL per USD |
Column names match the CSV headers exactly.
Download the Complete Dataset
The full dataset is available in CSV and Excel formats — daily observations spanning 1995–2026.
FRED Direct CSV Access
The underlying data is published in the Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED) database under the series code DEXBZUS, sourced from the Federal Reserve Board’s H.10 release:
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/graph/fredgraph.csv?id=DEXBZUS
The Eco3min dataset mirrors the same daily series, packaged in a stable, versionable CSV with consistent column names — designed for direct ingestion in Python, R, or any data pipeline. The URL never changes, making it suitable for automated scripts.
Direct CSV Access — Eco3min Structured Dataset
https://eco3min.fr/dataset/usd-brl-exchange-rate.csv
This URL returns the complete dataset in CSV format. It can be used directly in pandas, R, curl, or any data tool.
Using the Dataset in Python
import pandas as pd url = "https://eco3min.fr/dataset/usd-brl-exchange-rate.csv" df = pd.read_csv(url, parse_dates=["date"]) print(df.head()) print(df["usd_brl"].describe()) df.plot(x="date", y="usd_brl", title="USD/BRL Exchange Rate", legend=False)
Using the Dataset in R
library(readr) url <- "https://eco3min.fr/dataset/usd-brl-exchange-rate.csv" df <- read_csv(url) head(df) summary(df$usd_brl)
Both examples load the dataset directly from the URL — no download or API key required.
Methodology
The Federal Reserve reports the Brazilian reais per US dollar noon rate in its H.10 release; the series begins in 1995, after the 1994 launch of the real.
The Federal Reserve publishes these rates daily in its H.10 release. Values are indicative noon or end-of-day rates, not transactable quotes, and there are no observations on weekends or US holidays. The series begins in 1995.
This dataset is updated via an automated pull from the FRED API (series DEXBZUS) by an Eco3min pipeline running on GitHub Actions, which regenerates the cleaned CSV and Excel files and refreshes the page metadata.
Data Quality & Provider Notes
The Federal Reserve H.10 rates are a standard, widely cited reference for bilateral exchange rates. A few provider-specific points matter when using this series.
- Indicative, not transactable. H.10 rates are reference rates collected at a set time of day. They will differ from the bid/ask a trader actually deals on, and from other fixings (ECB, WM/Refinitiv 4pm London).
- Gaps on non-business days. There are no observations on weekends or US public holidays, so the series is not strictly continuous in calendar time.
- Bilateral, not trade-weighted. This is a single currency pair. It is not the broad, trade-weighted dollar index, which aggregates many bilateral rates.
- Discontinued or restated quotes. The Federal Reserve has occasionally changed how a rate is reported; treat very long histories as broadly consistent rather than methodologically identical throughout.
Common Pitfalls When Using This Series
- Reading the quotation direction backwards. This series is Brazilian reais per US dollar, so the number rises when the dollar strengthens and falls when the real strengthens. The real only dates from the 1994 Plano Real, so this series starts in 1995 and cannot be compared to earlier Brazilian currencies. Getting the direction wrong inverts every move and every regime described below.
- Treating gaps as missing data. Weekends and holidays have no H.10 observation; this is by design, not a data error. Resample carefully before computing returns.
- Confusing a bilateral rate with the dollar’s overall strength. One pair can move on currency-specific news while the broad, trade-weighted dollar barely moves, and vice versa.
Historical Regimes
1995–1998 — Crawling band. After the 1994 Plano Real tamed hyperinflation, the real was held in a crawling band near parity to the dollar.
1999 — Float and devaluation. In January 1999 Brazil abandoned the band and floated the real, which devalued sharply.
2002–2011 — Crisis, then commodity boom. The real swung with the 2002 election crisis, then strengthened through the commodity supercycle.
2012–2016 — Recession and Petrobras. Recession, the Petrobras corruption scandal, and impeachment drove the real sharply weaker.
2017–2026 — Weak and volatile. The real stayed weak and volatile, sensitive to fiscal politics, commodities, and the Fed.
Related Macroeconomic Datasets
- USD/CNY (Yuan) — the managed Chinese yuan
- USD/INR (Rupee) — the Indian rupee
- USD/MXN (Peso) — the Mexican peso
- USD/ZAR (Rand) — the South African rand, an EM risk proxy
- US Dollar Index (Broad) — the trade-weighted dollar these EM rates trade against
Emerging Markets Hub
This dataset is part of the Eco3min repository of exchange rates and policy rates for the major emerging-market economies, all sourced from the Federal Reserve and the OECD via FRED.
Explore the Emerging Markets Hub
Sources
- Federal Reserve Board — H.10 Foreign Exchange Rates, USD/BRL
- Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis — FRED database, series DEXBZUS
- Federal Reserve H.10 noon rate, New York — basis underlying the FRED series
Dataset Reference
Last updated — 7 June 2026
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