Can I Use My Power Bank in Brazil?
Yes — with an adapter.
Your device handles this country's voltage, but the plug shape is different. You need a plug adapter to fit the sockets here. A plug adapter only changes the shape — it does not change voltage, and that's fine in this case because your device already supports the local voltage.
The short answer
A power bank's wall charger is dual-voltage (100–240V) — a plug adapter is all you need. Note airline rules: power banks fly in carry-on only, usually under 100Wh (~27,000mAh).
Brazil runs 127V at 60Hz. CRITICAL EDGE CASE: Brazil has no single national voltage. Most of the south and southeast (São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro) is 127V, while much of the northeast and the capital Brasília is 220V — and both can even coexist on the same street. Always confirm the voltage of your specific city or hotel before plugging in. The frequency is 60Hz nationwide. Brazil uses the Type N plug (its own standard), which also accepts Type C.
Power Bank in Brazil at a glance
| Device voltage profile | dual |
|---|---|
| Typical wattage | 5–60W |
| Destination voltage | 127V (127–220V) |
| Destination frequency | 60Hz |
| Destination plug types | Type N, C |
| Voltage mismatch | 120V → 127V = +7V |
| Verdict | Plug adapter needed |
As an Amazon Associate and affiliate partner, we earn from qualifying purchases — at no extra cost to you. We only recommend gear we'd pack ourselves.
Get a travel adapter for Brazil ↗We may earn a commission — it never changes our verdict.
Other devices & destinations
FAQ
Will a travel adapter let me use my power bank in Brazil?
Brazil sockets use Type N/C. Yes — you need a Type N/C plug adapter for the shape.
Do I need a voltage converter for a power bank in Brazil?
No. If your power bank is dual-voltage (100–240V), you don't need a converter in Brazil.
What plug type does Brazil use?
Brazil uses Type N, C sockets at 127V / 60Hz.
Adapter vs converter explained
Guidance only — not professional electrical advice. Always confirm against your device's label before plugging in. Local wiring (especially in hotels and older buildings) can vary.