Brazil’s Rising Street-Homeless Count Tests A Key Claim About Progress

Brazil’s Rising Street-Homeless Count Tests A Key Claim About Progress
January 17, 2026

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Brazil’s Rising Street-Homeless Count Tests A Key Claim About Progress

Key Points

  • Brazil’s registered street-homeless population rose to 365,822 by end-2025, up 37,897 from December 2024.
  • The increase is heavily concentrated in the Southeast, led by São Paulo state, and reflects both hardship and better counting.
  • Official poverty fell in 2024, but homelessness can still grow when housing and health costs beat fragile incomes.

A single number is ricocheting across Brazil’s politics and social feeds: 365,822. That is the total of people registered in CadÚnico as living in a street situation at the end of 2025, according to the OBPopRua/Polos-UFMG observatory.

One year earlier, the registry showed 327,925. The rise is not subtle, and it forces a harder question than partisan slogans allow: how can a country post better poverty statistics and still see more people sleeping outside?

Start with where the increase sits. The Southeast accounts for 222,311 people, about 61% of the national total. São Paulo state alone registers 150,958.

Rio de Janeiro shows 33,656 and Minas Gerais 33,139. Amapá has 292. In other words, the problem is most visible in the places that also sell Brazil to the world as modern, investable, and cosmopolitan.

Brazil’s Rising Street-Homeless Count Tests A Key Claim About Progress

Brazil’s Rising Street-Homeless Count Tests A Key Claim About Progress

Now look at what the registry says about life at street level. In a CadÚnico profile snapshot, 84% are men and 88% are aged 18 to 59. Children and adolescents are about 3%.

Roughly 81% report monthly income up to R$109 ($20). With a minimum wage around R$1,518 ($281), one medical shock or one rent increase can flip a household from “barely holding on” to “no address.”

But the story behind the story is measurement. Researchers list a stronger CadÚnico system itself as a driver of the higher totals, because outreach, updating, and interviewer training improved. That means part of the jump is a clearer picture, not only a sudden wave.

The apparent contradiction with falling poverty is also real. IBGE reported poverty fell from 27.3% in 2023 to 23.1% in 2024, and extreme poverty from 4.4% to 3.5%, using monthly lines near R$694 ($129) and R$218 ($40). Those gains help, yet they do not guarantee a door that locks.

Policy exists, but the gap is execution at scale. Brazil’s national street-population policy dates to 2009. The federal Ruas Visíveis plan launched in late 2023 pledged about R$982 million ($182 million).

São Paulo state says it has repassed R$633 million ($117 million) to municipalities, with R$145.6 million ($27 million) focused on street-population actions.

This matters abroad because it reveals how quickly big-city prosperity can coexist with visible collapse, and how political narratives can outrun lived reality.

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