Background on Open Access Funding in Brazilian Higher Education
The Brazilian higher education and research landscape has long grappled with the costs associated with disseminating scientific findings. Open access publishing, while promoting wider reach, often involves Article Processing Charges (APCs), also known as Taxas de Processamento de Artigos. These fees can create barriers for researchers, particularly those in public universities and graduate programs funded by federal agencies.
In this context, the Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES), an agency linked to the Ministério da Educação (MEC), plays a central role through the Programa de Apoio à Disseminação de Informação Científica e Tecnológica (PADICT). Established to support the dissemination of scientific and technological information, PADICT facilitates payments for APCs in open access journals via agreements with publishers.
The Evolution of CAPES Rules for APC Payments
Earlier regulations, including Portaria CAPES nº 120 of April 26, 2024, laid the foundation for these payments under PADICT. Building on operational experience, community feedback, and the need for streamlined processes, CAPES introduced updates via Portaria nº 224, dated May 15, 2026, published in the Diário Oficial da União.
This portaria amends the previous framework to simplify workflows, introduce more objective eligibility criteria, and enhance transparency. It aligns procedures with the routines of the Diretoria de Informação Científica e Estudos Avançados (DICE) and the Coordenação-Geral do Portal de Periódicos (CGPIC).
Key Updates in Portaria 224/2026
The new rules centralize the eligibility analysis for corresponding authors directly at CGPIC/CAPES. This removes intermediate steps previously handled by Pró-Reitorias de Pós-Graduação or equivalent bodies at higher education institutions, reducing administrative burden.
Eligibility now applies to a broader group: active faculty members, researchers in ongoing post-doctoral positions, regularly enrolled master's and doctoral students, graduates who completed their degrees up to five years prior, and public agents affiliated with PADICT-participating institutions. Criteria focus on the author's functional and academic status at the manuscript submission date.
Additional requirements include mandatory use of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license and linkage of a unique ORCID ID to the author's profile in the Meus Dados CAPES system. The corresponding author must be registered in the Plataforma Sucupira.
Strengthening Integrity and Transparency
Portaria 224/2026 reinforces commitments to scientific integrity, editorial transparency, and proper acknowledgment of CAPES/MEC funding in publications. It explicitly prohibits practices such as automatic redirection of articles to journals outside established CAPES agreements, aiming to prevent distortions during submission.
Monitoring, follow-up, and irregularity investigation mechanisms have been improved, bolstering governance and legal security for these public fund expenditures.
Impacts on Researchers and Graduate Programs
For researchers in Brazilian universities, these changes promise faster processing and greater predictability. Graduate students and early-career scholars, including recent graduates, gain clearer pathways to have APCs covered, supporting career development in a competitive academic environment.
Institutions benefit from reduced internal processing loads, allowing focus on core academic activities. The centralization fosters consistency across the national higher education system.
Support for Open Science in Brazil
By refining APC funding rules, CAPES advances Brazil's commitment to open science. Wider dissemination of research outputs enhances visibility for Brazilian scholarship internationally and supports evidence-based policy and innovation domestically.
Director of DICE Daniela Freddo noted that the updates eliminate obstacles while ensuring resources fulfill their role efficiently, maintaining the rigor and transparency required in public management.
Practical Considerations for Applicants
Researchers seeking APC coverage should verify their status against the updated eligibility criteria and ensure registration in relevant CAPES platforms. Articles must comply with license and identification requirements to qualify.
Coordination with affiliated institutions remains important for overall program participation under PADICT, even as direct eligibility checks shift centrally.
Broader Context in Brazilian Higher Education
This portaria fits into ongoing efforts to modernize research support mechanisms. It complements other CAPES initiatives in postgraduate training, internationalization, and scientific infrastructure, contributing to a more robust ecosystem for knowledge production and sharing.
Stakeholders across federal universities, research institutes, and funding bodies will monitor implementation to assess effects on publication rates and research equity.
Future Outlook
As Brazil continues to expand its research footprint, refined funding mechanisms like those in Portaria 224/2026 position the country to better compete globally while prioritizing accessibility. Continued dialogue between CAPES, universities, and the academic community will be key to refining these tools further.
The emphasis on objective criteria and streamlined processes signals a maturation of open access support structures tailored to national needs.
Resources for Further Information
Details on the portaria and related programs are available through official CAPES channels. Researchers are encouraged to consult the Portal de Periódicos for guidance on agreements and application processes.
