TLDR Brazil’s Joint Congressional Committee postponed its vote on Provisional Measure 1,348/2026. The measure sends part of sports betting revenue to the Federal Police Fund, known as Funapol. The revenue share starts at 1% in 2026 and rises to 3% by 2028. Up to BRL 200 million could move to Funapol in 2026 alone. The measure still needs approval from both chambers of Congress before it becomes permanent law.
Brazil’s Joint Congressional Committee, known as the CCJ, was set to vote on a new betting revenue plan. That vote has now been pushed back.
The committee will instead discuss and vote on the report during a session in the Federal Senate. It is scheduled for Wednesday, July 1, at 2:30 p.m.
The meeting will happen in Plenary Room 6 of the Nilo Coelho Wing. This is where the CCJ holds many of its formal sessions.
The proposal is called Provisional Measure 1,348/2026. It aims to send a portion of Brazil’s fixed-odds sports betting revenue to a fund for the Federal Police.
That fund is called Funapol. It supports the financial needs of Brazil’s federal law enforcement agencies.
Revenue Share Set to Increase Through 2028
The report was written by Congressman Aluisio Mendes. Senator Weverton reviewed it as the CCJ’s rapporteur.
Under the plan, Funapol would receive a growing share of betting revenue over time. The schedule is broken into three steps.
In 2026, Funapol would get 1% of betting revenue. That share rises to 2% in 2027.
Starting in 2028, the share would settle at 3% going forward. Lawmakers say this schedule keeps the existing betting revenue distribution mostly unchanged elsewhere.
The measure also allows up to BRL 200 million to be transferred to Funapol in 2026 alone. This is separate from the percentage-based schedule.
The bill