Guide

How the exchange rate works

Exchange rateCurrencyPTAXDollar

Everyone watches the dollar. But when it is time to buy, sell or receive, the bank’s rate is not the one you saw on Google. The gap comes from the reference rate, the spread and taxes. Here is how it works.

A chart of the dollar against the real

What is an exchange rate?

An exchange rate is simply the price of one currency in another. When the dollar is quoted at R$5.50, it takes R$5.50 to buy US$1. That price changes all day long, driven by:
  • Supply and demand for dollars.
  • Interest rates in Brazil and the US.
  • International trade flows.
  • Foreign investment.
  • Economic and political events.
Just like stocks have a market price, so do currencies.

Who sets the dollar rate?

Contrary to what many assume, the Central Bank does not set the daily price of the dollar. The rate is formed by the market: banks, brokerages, exporters, importers, funds and companies trade dollars continuously, and the market rate emerges from those transactions. The Central Bank can intervene by buying or selling dollars, but it does not fix the price.

Commercial dollar, tourist dollar and PTAX

There are three references every Brazilian should know.
Commercial dollar. The rate used in large financial and corporate operations, and usually the one shown on Google, Bloomberg, Reuters and financial portals. When someone says the dollar is at R$5.50, they usually mean the commercial rate.
Tourist dollar. The retail rate, for buying cash, international cards and exchange houses. It is usually more expensive because it builds in extra margins and operating costs.
PTAX. The official reference rate calculated and published daily by the Central Bank, an average of the rates collected through the day. It is widely used in financial contracts, tax calculations, accounting statements and regulatory references. Important: you normally do not buy or sell dollars exactly at PTAX.

Why is my bank’s rate different from Google’s?

This is probably the most common question. Imagine the commercial dollar at R$5.50; your bank might offer R$5.70. The difference usually comes from two things.
1. FX spread. The margin charged by the institution, the gap between the market rate and the rate offered to you. In the example, the commercial R$5.50 against the offered R$5.70 is an effective spread of R$0.20 per dollar. Depending on the institution, it can be a large share of the total cost.
2. IOF. Many FX operations also carry IOF, and the impact varies by operation type. That is why the final cost can land well above the rate shown in the market.

How much does the spread really cost?

Imagine converting US$10,000. If the commercial rate is R$5.50 and the bank uses R$5.70:
  • Difference per dollar: R$0.20.
  • Extra cost: R$2,000.
Often the spread costs more than the explicit fees the institution charges. More in FX spread, explained.

What moves the dollar rate?

The main factors include:
Interest rates. When Brazilian rates rise, real-denominated assets can become more attractive to international investors.
The US economy. US economic data directly influences global demand for dollars.
Trade flows. Exports and imports affect the supply of and demand for the currency.
The global picture. Periods of uncertainty usually increase demand for the dollar as a safe haven.

Which rate should you watch?

For most people and businesses, the best reference is the commercial dollar. But watching the rate alone is not enough. What matters is the total cost of the operation:
  • Market rate.
  • Spread applied.
  • IOF.
  • Extra fees.

How Ruvo sets its rate

Ruvo uses the market rate as its reference and applies a transparent fee. Instead of the wide margins typical of retail, it keeps the rate close to the commercial reference, which makes it easy to compare the figure shown in the media with what you actually receive. Converting reais into digital dollars is 0.5%, with 0% IOF. Ruvo also connects several financial rails to cut the need for traditional intermediaries and their costs:
  • ACH.
  • RTP.
  • Pix.
  • Stablecoins.

Bottom line

The dollar rate you see on Google is only the starting point. What you actually pay or receive depends on the spread, the taxes and the fees each institution applies. That is why understanding how the exchange rate works is the first step to saving when you receive, convert or move dollars. For the income-tax side of dollar earnings, see the 2026 tax table for dollar earners.

Converting US$10,000 (commercial dollar at R$5.50)

ItemRuvoTraditional bank
Rate usedClose to commercial (~R$5.50)~R$5.70 (tourist)
FX costA stated 0.5% (~R$275)Spread of ~R$0.20/dollar (~R$2,000)
IOF0%Depends on the operation
You see it before confirmingYesRarely

FAQs

About the exchange rate.

Talk to support
  • The official reference rate calculated daily by the Central Bank from market quotes.

  • The commercial rate is used in market operations and large transactions. The tourist rate usually includes bigger margins, for retail operations.

  • Because Google shows a market reference. Banks and brokerages usually add a spread and other costs.

  • No. The spread is a margin charged by the financial institution; IOF is a tax charged by the government.

  • Not necessarily. It is an official reference, but it does not represent the rate at which you will actually buy or sell dollars.

  • The total cost of the operation: exchange rate, spread, IOF and fees. Comparing only the rate can be misleading.

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