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Brazil's Beef Exports Face China Quota Barrier

Published Jul 16, 2026
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Summary:
  • Brazil has used up its 1.1 million metric ton preferential quota for beef shipments to China; any extra exports now incur an additional 55% tariff.
  • Brazil shipped about 1.65 million tons of beef to China in 2025, and forecasts point to a sharp reduction in 2026. Overall Brazilian beef shipments are anticipated to fall by roughly 10% this year.
  • Chinese protective measures are likely to stay in place for three years, causing job cuts, mandatory time off for employees, and possible industry consolidation as large meatpackers acquire smaller rivals.

The Quota Is Filled - Now What?

Brazil's cattle industry just ran into a wall. The preferential quota that lets Brazilian beef enter China with only a 12% tariff is completely exhausted. Any beef Brazil tries to sell to China beyond that 1.1 million metric ton limit gets hit with an additional 55% tariff. That is a massive jump, and it changes the math for every meatpacker in the country.

China is Brazil's largest foreign beef buyer by a long shot. In 2025, Brazil shipped about 1.65 million tons of beef to China. That number is about to fall hard.

The industry expects Brazil's total beef exports for 2026 to drop about 10% from last year, and the herd size - roughly 195 million head - will stay flat. There is no other buyer that can absorb those volumes.

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The quota system was designed to manage trade flows and prevent market disruption. Brazil and China negotiated the preferential quota as part of bilateral trade agreements, but once filled, the steep tariff acts as a powerful brake on further exports. With no alternative market matching China's scale, Brazilian producers face a stark adjustment.

Roberto Perosa, president of the Brazilian Association of Meat Exporting Industries (Abiec), put it bluntly: "There is no other buyer with China's appetite." He added, "No other market can absorb the volumes China buys."

Two Problems at Once

The China quota is not Brazil's only headache. The European Union is another large market that could close its doors. Brazil has not yet met the EU's rules on the use of antimicrobials in food-producing animals. If that does not get resolved, Brazilian beef could be locked out of Europe entirely.

Perosa warned that the EU's decisions ripple globally. "When the European Union takes a decision, it affects the whole world, even if the volumes we sell there are relatively small," he said. Brazil is working with its authorities on technical proposals to keep that door open.

Meanwhile, the United States is a rare bright spot. The US has imposed a 25% tariff on most Brazilian goods, but beef is exempt. With domestic beef supplies tight and prices elevated due to a cattle shortage, American buyers are expected to import a record amount of Brazilian beef this year. That helps, but it cannot replace China.

What Happens Next

The industry is bracing for a long three-year adjustment. A number of meatpacking plants have started cutting staff, with other firms putting workers on mandatory time off to cope with declining demand. Industry consolidation may also pick up pace, with big meatpackers buying out smaller competitors as profit margins tighten, Perosa noted.

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