The Brazilian Superintendence of Private Insurance (SUSEP) released a preview of version 3.1.0 of the layout for the Operations Registration System (SRO), setting out the next expansion of insurance and open private pension operations that must be registered in the system. The draft was presented to more than 200 industry participants, with questions and suggestions due by 19 January and official publication planned for 2 March 2026. Version 3.1.0 brings in new lines and products envisaged in SUSEP Circulars 711, 713, 714 and 715 of 2024, including personal insurance with risk cover under the coverage-capital repartition or capitalisation regimes, open private pension products with risk cover, survival-cover operations in open private pension and personal insurance plans, and financial assistance operations by open private pension entities and insurers. The broader SRO project foresees mandatory data submission in the new layout from 2 March 2026 for non-life insurance and personal insurance structured under the simple repartition regime in line with Circular 710/2024. In the interim, layout version 3.0.0 is in the homologation phase, allowing supervised entities to record operations in registrars’ test environments, with registrars forwarding the data to the Integrated Platform test environment for SUSEP monitoring through periodic indicators and metrics.
Brazilian Superintendence of Private Insurance (SUSEP) 2025-12-12
Brazilian Superintendence of Private Insurance previews Operations Registration System layout version 3.1.0 expanding reportable operations with publication planned for 2 March 2026
The Brazilian Superintendence of Private Insurance (SUSEP) has released a preview of version 3.1.0 of the Operations Registration System (SRO) layout, expanding registration requirements for insurance and open private pension operations. This version introduces new lines and products as per SUSEP Circulars 711, 713, 714, and 715 of 2024, with mandatory data submission starting 2 March 2026. Meanwhile, version 3.0.0 is in the homologation phase, allowing supervised entities to test operations in registrars' environments.