
A 2025 report by Brazil’s Ministry of Labor and Employment reveals that 2,772 people were rescued from situations analogous to slavery that year. For the first time, most of the workers – 68 percent – were employed in city centers.


“Contemporary slave labor is not restricted to a specific economic activity. Even though most rescues traditionally happen in rural areas, in 2025 the number of workers rescued in urban areas was higher,” said Shakti Borela, general coordinator of inspection for the eradication of slave labor and human trafficking.
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The construction sector saw the highest number of rescues, with 601 cases in masonry work and another 186 in building construction. Other activities with a high number of rescues were public administration, with 304 cases; coffee cultivation, with 184; and the extraction and crushing of stones and other materials, with 126.
According to the ministry, most of the rescued workers are aged 30 through 39, are male, and have low levels of education. Among those rescued, 83 percent self-identified as black or pardo.
In the view of Dercylete Loureiro, director of the Labor Inspection Department, this profile reveals trajectories marked by historical vulnerabilities, which have exposed this segment of the population to conditions analogous to slavery for decades.
Rights
After the crackdowns, all workers were able to access their legal right to an insurance benefit for rescued workers, paid in three installments equal to one minimum wage, and were referred to social welfare services. Over BRL 9 million was said to have been paid to the victims.
In total, tax auditors carried out 1,594 operations to combat slave-like labor in 2025, which, in addition to rescues, also ensured labor rights for more than 48 thousand workers.