IBGE Full Access — Dados Brasileiros MCP. Combine demographics, economy, and history into one report.
IBGE Full Access — Dados Brasileiros provides one unified connection to Brazil's official statistics. You can query census data, economic classifications (CNAE), name popularity trends since the 1930s, and deep demographics for any municipality or state. It pulls together information from multiple domains—from GDP figures to quality-of-life metrics—in a single API call.
Give Claude and any AI agent real-world access
Build detailed municipal profiles by combining population metrics, health data, education levels, and GDP figures.
Track the most popular names in Brazil over decades to understand cultural or demographic shifts.
List and query the 1,332 CNAE codes to categorize industries within specific states or municipalities.
Retrieve socioeconomic metrics for Brazil and compare them directly against any other country using its M49 code.
Access SIDRA tables to pull aggregate data on population, employment, or inflation at multiple geographic levels (macro-region down to municipality).
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What AI agents can do with IBGE Full Access — Dados Brasileiros: 15 Tools
Use these fifteen specialized tools to retrieve, cross-reference, and analyze any piece of official statistical data related to Brazilian geography, population, or economy.
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Start using IBGE Full Access — Dados Brasileiros MCPList Estados
Retrieves a complete list of all 27 Brazilian states by their names and codes.
Get Nome Frequencia
Calculates the frequency of a specific name for any given decade in Brazil's history.
Get Ranking Nomes
Provides rankings of the most popular Brazilian names, allowing filtering by sex or...
List Secoes Cnae
Lists all 21 high-level economic sections (CNAE) used to classify business...
Get Subclasse Cnae
Retrieves detailed information for specific, lower-level CNAE subclasses.
Get Noticias Ibge
Pulls the latest press releases and news updates directly from the official IBGE news agency.
Get Pais Indicadores
Retrieves comparative socioeconomic indicators for any country using its standardized M49 code.
Get Municipios Por Uf
Lists all municipalities located within a specified Brazilian state (UF).
Get Municipio
Fetches comprehensive details about a specific municipality using its official IBGE...
List Regioes
Provides the names and definitions of Brazil's five macro-regions.
List Agregados
Lists all available aggregate tables within the SIDRA statistical system.
Get Agregado Data
Extracts raw data points from a specific SIDRA aggregate table, allowing filtering by geographic level (N1=Brazil, N3=State...
Get Agregado Metadados
Retrieves the descriptive metadata for any given SIDRA aggregate table.
List Pesquisas
Lists all available major survey types conducted by IBGE (e.g., health, education).
Get Resultados Pesquisa
Gets specific results from an IBGE survey for a given municipality.
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The headache of piecing together Brazilian statistics.
Today, if you need to know a city's profile—say, Florianópolis—you open one tab for population data (SIDRA), another tab to check its economic classifications (CNAE), and yet a third place just to see the latest health survey results. You spend hours jumping between disparate government websites, manually downloading spreadsheets, and then spending even more time trying to merge all that data in Excel.
With this MCP, you simply ask your agent for a 'complete profile' of that city. It automatically runs the necessary checks: getting municipality details (`get_municipio`), pulling relevant economic sectors using `list_secoes_cnae`, and fetching survey indicators from multiple sources. You get the final, clean report in one go.
Accessing comprehensive Brazilian intelligence with IBGE Full Access — Dados Brasileiros.
Manual data retrieval means losing context and making assumptions about which data layers belong together. You risk using outdated statistics or forgetting to cross-reference the economic classification (CNAE) against the current population census count.
This MCP fixes that by providing a single, unified interface for all these sources. Your agent handles the complexity of combining `get_agregado_data` with `list_estados`, giving you accurate and contextually rich reports every time.
What IBGE Full Access — Dados Brasileiros MCP does for your AI
This MCP gives you direct access to Brazil's vast official data sets, meaning you don't have to stitch together five different sources just to paint a picture of a region. Instead of dealing with fragmented APIs for census counts, economic sectors, and local demographics, your agent can treat it like one single, massive database.
You get everything from listing the 27 states and finding specific city details down to querying complex aggregate tables using SIDRA.
Want to know what people were named in a certain decade? Need to map out which economic activity classifications are most common in São Paulo's suburbs? Or maybe you just need to compare Brazil’s GDP per capita with Australia’s?
It handles it. You connect this MCP through Vinkius, and your preferred AI client routes the complex queries, giving you a complete intelligence layer for any Brazilian market research project. It lets you build reports that cross demographics, history, and modern economic indicators without breaking a sweat on API management.
019d75b6-b563-7061-8149-54df46661a8b How to set up IBGE Full Access — Dados Brasileiros MCP
The bottom line is you send one natural language prompt and get complex, multi-source Brazilian statistics returned in one go.
Specify the required Brazilian dataset, such as a target state, a specific economic activity code, or a desired time period.
Your agent executes multiple targeted calls across different data layers—for example, combining list_estados with get_agregado_data and then adding name trends using get_ranking_nomes.
The MCP returns a single, consolidated data payload that includes all the requested metrics and classifications, ready for analysis.
Who uses IBGE Full Access — Dados Brasileiros MCP
Market analysts, urban planners, academic researchers, and geopolitical strategists. This tool is for anyone who needs deep, reliable statistical intelligence about Brazil that goes beyond basic census counts.
Determining which services (like schools or hospitals) are needed in a growing neighborhood by cross-referencing municipality population data with local health survey indicators.
Mapping out consumer spending potential across different Brazilian regions by correlating CNAE economic sections with demographic profiles and GDP per capita.
Analyzing how population trends or name popularity have shifted over multiple decades to write a paper on social change in the country.
Benefits of connecting IBGE Full Access — Dados Brasileiros MCP
Avoids data silos. Instead of running separate queries for city geography (get_municipio) and economic activity (list_secoes_cnae), you get them merged instantly.
Global comparison built-in. Need to benchmark São Paulo? Use get_pais_indicadores to compare its GDP metrics against any country in the world, eliminating manual data entry.
Unmatched depth on names. Tracking name popularity over decades using get_nome_frequencia gives insight into cultural and social shifts that simple census numbers miss.
Cross-domain reporting. Combine population totals from a survey (list_pesquisas) with the economic structure of a region via CNAE to build deep market reports.
High granularity on data sets. You can pinpoint statistics at the municipality level using get_agregado_data or get specific localized results using get_resultados_pesquisa.
IBGE Full Access — Dados Brasileiros MCP use cases
Assessing investment potential in a new state.
An analyst wants to know if Paraná is ready for a tech hub. They prompt the agent: 'Give me the economic profile and demographic trends.' The MCP uses get_municipios_por_uf to list all towns, then runs list_secoes_cnae on them, finally cross-referencing with population data from SIDRA aggregate tables (get_agregado_data) for a holistic view.
Writing a report on social change in the Northeast.
A researcher needs to show how education levels have changed. They ask for survey results using list_pesquisas and then combine that with regional data by listing macro-regions (list_regioes) and fetching specific demographic indicators via SIDRA aggregates.
Comparing Brazilian quality of life to global standards.
A policy advisor needs a quick comparison. They use get_pais_indicadores with Brazil's M49 code, allowing them to instantly compare its literacy rate and average income against multiple other nations in one query.
Building a business plan around naming trends.
A consultant needs market data for a naming agency. They use get_ranking_nomes to find the top 5 names for a given decade, and then cross-reference that with CNAE codes (list_secoes_cnae) to suggest related business services.
IBGE Full Access — Dados Brasileiros MCP tradeoffs
What to watch out for, and the recommended way to handle each one.
Treating demographics and economics separately
Running two separate queries: one for population density using get_municipio and a second, unrelated query just to get CNAE codes. This forces the user to manually compare disparate results.
Combine them into a single prompt. Ask your agent: 'What is the primary economic sector (CNAE) of this municipality, and what was its population 10 years ago?' The MCP handles both data calls in one sequence.
Ignoring geographic scope
Only looking at national averages when analyzing a state. Missing crucial local nuances because the agent couldn't drill down to the correct level.
Use get_agregado_data and specify the desired level (N3=UF or N6=Município) in your prompt so you get granular data, not just national averages.
Forgetting historical context
Using only current census data without understanding how name popularity has changed since the 1930s. Missing key insights into cultural continuity.
Explicitly ask for historical trends using get_nome_frequencia to see shifts in naming patterns over specific decades.
When to use IBGE Full Access — Dados Brasileiros MCP
Use this MCP if your project requires deep, multi-layered statistical intelligence about Brazil. Specifically, you need to correlate economic activity (CNAE) with demographics, history (name trends), and geography (municipalities/states). Don't use it if you only need simple, single-point data—for instance, if you just want a list of all 27 states; the list_estados tool does that efficiently. You also don't need this MCP if your focus is purely on global macroeconomics and never touches Brazilian specifics; in that case, a generalized world data API would suffice. However, because it consolidates so many specialized domains (SIDRA aggregates, CNAE, names, surveys) into one place, it becomes the definitive choice for any comprehensive study of the country.
Frequently asked questions about IBGE Full Access — Dados Brasileiros MCP
How do I get economic data using IBGE Full Access — Dados Brasileiros? +
You use the CNAE tools. First, run list_secoes_cnae to see all major categories, then use get_subclasse_cnae for specific details on the industry you're interested in.
Can I compare Brazil's demographics with other countries using this MCP? +
Yes. Use the get_pais_indicadores tool and provide the M49 country code for any nation to run a direct socioeconomic comparison against Brazil.
What data sources are available for city demographics in IBGE Full Access — Dados Brasileiros? +
You can access various sources. Use get_municipio for core details, and then use the survey tools like list_pesquisas and get_resultados_pesquisa to get specialized data.
How do I find out about name popularity in Brazil? +
Use get_ranking_nomes. You can filter the results by decade or sex to see how popular a name was during specific time periods, giving you historical insight into demographics.
Which tool should I use for aggregate census data across states? +
You need get_agregado_data. This tool allows you to query complex SIDRA tables and specify the exact geographic level, like a state (N3=UF), ensuring your metrics are correctly scoped.