Direct registration In 1991, it was decided that universities and research institutes would be allowed second-level .br domains directly. For example:
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro got
ufrj.br;
University of São Paulo got
usp.br;
National Institute for Space Research got
inpe.br; and so on. In late 2000, the Brazilian Internet Steering Committee reported abuse in this system, and called for all institutions directly under .br to be moved to .edu.br – so, for example,
ufrj.br would become
ufrj.edu.br. During a meeting in early 2001, however, the Committee decided it would be of public interest to not move every second-level domain as to avoid confusion, but instead established rules regarding their registration: • No longer accepting automatic registration of second-level domains, and evaluating every request for one individually; • Creating edu.br, and forwarding requests from education and research institutions to it; • Concession to education and research institutes that already had a second-level .br domain, as long as its usage is appropriate and that domain name is related to the institution's name or acronym. Domains approved are automatically duplicated under edu.br as well, and both may exist concurrently – for example, the still existing
ufrj.br also has a registered
ufrj.edu.br, although the latter is not used; • Other institutions not approved above must be migrated permanently to edu.br (but would be given sufficient time for the transition). As of September 2024, Registro.br reports 1207 domains registered directly under .br. They are the following:
Special second-level domains From 2000 until 2009, during election cycles, electoral candidates could register domains under
CAN.br, with the format
[name][number].can.br – where the name is the registered candidate name, and the number is the identification number for that candidate in the election (related to the
party's identification number). The second-level domain was in a category of its own, called "natural persons, special". As an example, during the 2004 elections for mayor of
Aracaju: •
Marcelo Déda had the website
deda13.can.br (his surname and
Worker's Party's identification number, 13); • Susana Azevedo had the website
susana23.can.br (her first name and
Cidadania's identification number, 23); • Jorge Alberto had the website
jorgealberto15.can.br (his name and
MDB's identification number, 15). Domains were free for registered candidates. Additionally, domains were automatically cancelled at the end of the
first round if the candidate lost, and remaining ones were cancelled after the end of the second round.
Online gambling In late 2024, legislation regulating
online gambling in Brazil – usually referred to simply as "bets" in the country – was passed. Among the stipulations was that, from January 2025 onward, such companies must operate under a
BET.br domain. By definition, any online gambling websites not operating under a .bet.br domain are operating illegally.
Agencies There are multiple agencies registered directly under .br, as second-level domains, that are not higher education or research institutions. The following list might not be exhaustive: Most of these agencies are subsidiaries of
CGI.br and, as such, they follow a similar
corporate identity. The "logos" are combinations of the names of the agencies with the logo for .br, all of which are simply typed out with Brandon Schoech (Tepid Monkey)'s
freeware font "Qhytsdakx": File:DotBr logo.svg|Logo for .br, a slightly modified "br" in green File:Cgi.br.svg|Logo for
CGI.br File:NIC.br logo.svg|Logo for
NIC.br File:Ix.br.svg|Logo for
IX.br File:DotBr domain logo.svg|Logo for
Registro.br File:IPv6.br logo.svg|Logo for IPv6.br
Networks There are multiple networks registered directly under .br, usually of academic nature. Again, this list may not be exhaustive: == Usage statistics ==