Brazilian Real (R$) to Chilean Peso ($) Conversion
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.
Chilean Peso
The Chilean Peso (CLP) is the official currency of Chile, managed by the Banco Central de Chile. Chile is the world's largest copper producer — accounting for approximately 27% of global output — making the CLP a commodity currency highly sensitive to copper prices. Chile is also the world's largest lithium producer, giving the peso additional exposure to growing demand from electric vehicle battery manufacturing. The CLP is quoted in large nominal values (typically 800–950 per USD) with no decimal subdivision in everyday use.
| Brazilian Real (R$) | Chilean Peso ($) |
|---|---|
| R$ 0.1 | $ 0.1 |
| R$ 1 | $ 1 |
| R$ 2 | $ 2 |
| R$ 3 | $ 3 |
| R$ 5 | $ 5 |
| R$ 10 | $ 10 |
| R$ 20 | $ 20 |
| R$ 30 | $ 30 |
| R$ 50 | $ 50 |
| R$ 100 | $ 100 |
| R$ 1000 | $ 1000 |