Mexican Peso (MX$) to Brazilian Real (R$) Conversion
Mexican Peso
The Mexican Peso (MXN) is the official currency of Mexico and the most traded Latin American currency after the Brazilian Real. The current peso was introduced in 1993 as the Nuevo Peso, replacing the old peso at a rate of 1:1,000 to end the confusion caused by decades of high inflation. Mexico's close economic integration with the United States — formalised by NAFTA (now USMCA) — means the MXN is highly sensitive to US Federal Reserve policy, trade developments, and oil prices, since Mexico is a significant oil producer.
Brazilian Real
The Brazilian Real (BRL) was introduced on 1 July 1994 as part of the Plano Real — an economic stabilisation programme that successfully ended Brazil's hyperinflation, which had peaked at over 2,000% annually in the early 1990s. The Real replaced the Cruzeiro Real at 1:2,750 and was initially pegged to the US Dollar before transitioning to a managed float in 1999. Managed by the Banco Central do Brasil, the BRL is the most traded Latin American currency and critical for your Portuguese-speaking audience.
| Mexican Peso (MX$) | Brazilian Real (R$) |
|---|---|
| MX$ 0.1 | R$ 0.1 |
| MX$ 1 | R$ 1 |
| MX$ 2 | R$ 2 |
| MX$ 3 | R$ 3 |
| MX$ 5 | R$ 5 |
| MX$ 10 | R$ 10 |
| MX$ 20 | R$ 20 |
| MX$ 30 | R$ 30 |
| MX$ 50 | R$ 50 |
| MX$ 100 | R$ 100 |
| MX$ 1000 | R$ 1000 |