Automatic Pix: What Changes in Recurring Billing in 2026
Automatic Pix arrived in 2026 and changes recurring billing for SMEs: debit without a card, fewer failures, and cleaner reconciliation. See what to do.
by Cleverson Gouvêa

Automatic Pix changed recurring billing for Brazilian companies as of June 16, 2026. Those who sell subscriptions, monthly fees, or contract services can now debit customers on a scheduled basis, without relying on credit cards and with prior authorization from the payer. In this guide, I explain what changes in practice for SMEs—cost, delinquency, reconciliation, and customer experience—without empty promises.
TL;DR
- Since June 16, 2026, Pix allows recurring payments with prior authorization: the customer approves the recurrence once, and debits follow automatically.
- No credit card needed—which opens the door for the approximately 60 million Brazilians without access to revolving credit.
- For gyms, schools, EAD, SaaS, and service providers with monthly fees, it is a third option between boleto and recurring card.
- Pix usually has a lower acceptance cost than cards, but confirm fees with your bank or PSP—they vary.
- It is part of a larger agenda by the Central Bank: Pix 2.0, Open Finance, and Drex.
What is Automatic Pix (and What Changes in 2026)
Automatic Pix is the Pix modality for recurring payments. Instead of the customer opening the app and approving each charge, they authorize the recurrence once. From then on, debits occur on the agreed dates without further interaction each month.
The difference from regular Pix is prior authorization. In traditional Pix, each payment requires an action from the payer. In Automatic, the action is the initial approval of the recurring contract. After that, the flow runs on its own—with control and security rules defined by the Central Bank.
Why does this matter? Because until June 16, 2026, charging a subscription via Pix meant hoping the customer remembered to pay every month. It was manual Pix disguised as recurrence. Now there is an official track for scheduled debit that does not go through a card.
At Agathas, we have been charging subscriptions for years and I know the pain of each model. Boleto has high delinquency and annoying reconciliation. Recurring card fails when the card expires, is blocked, or exceeds the limit. Automatic Pix enters precisely this gap, with a detail that changes the game: it eliminates the need for a card.
Why This Matters for Those Who Charge Recurring Payments
The most underestimated point of Automatic Pix is its reach. The measure should especially benefit the approximately 60 million Brazilians who do not have access to revolving credit, meaning they do not have an active credit card or do not want to use it for subscriptions.
Think about what this means for your funnel. If your only automatic recurring track was the card, you were, in practice, refusing a huge slice of the market even before the sales conversation. Those who only have a bank account and Pix were left out or fell into boleto.
For an SME, more reach at checkout is usually worth more than any page optimization. A customer who previously gave up because they didn't have a card can now subscribe. That is the silent gain.
There is also the trust factor. Brazilians already master Pix. Asking someone to authorize a recurrence via Pix has less psychological friction than typing the 16 digits of a card on a site the person doesn't know. Familiarity reduces abandonment.
Automatic Pix vs. Boleto vs. Recurring Card vs. Direct Debit
No method is best at everything. The choice depends on your ticket, your audience, and your reconciliation structure. The table below summarizes the criteria that weigh most in the daily life of a recurring billing operation.
| Criteria | Automatic Pix | Recurring Boleto | Recurring Card | Direct Debit |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acceptance cost | Tends to be low (confirm with PSP) | Fee per issued boleto | Percentage per transaction | Fee per bank agreement |
| Needs card | No | No | Yes | No |
| Reach (without card) | High | High | Low | Medium (depends on bank) |
| Failure due to expiry/limit | Not applicable | Not applicable | Common (card expires/over limit) | Rare |
| Confirmation | Practically immediate | May take days to clear | Immediate | Depends on bank cycle |
| Reconciliation | Automatic by identifier | Manual or semi-automatic | Automatic | Depends on return file |
| Effort to activate | Low (authorization in app) | Low (sending boleto) | Medium (card data) | High (agreement + enrollment) |
Read the table as a starting point, not a verdict. Direct debit, for example, usually requires an agreement with each bank—a barrier that pushes SMEs away. Automatic Pix is born without this friction of individual agreements.
Impact on Delinquency and Reconciliation
Delinquency in recurring billing has two origins. Voluntary, when the customer decides not to pay. And involuntary, when payment fails for technical reasons—expired card, exceeded limit, forgotten boleto.
Recurring card suffers from involuntary failure. Cards expire, are reissued due to fraud, have their limit consumed. Each such failure becomes a lost charge that you only recover with a retry and reminder sequence. Automatic Pix has no expiry or credit limit in the way. The account either exists or not; the balance is there or not.
This does not eliminate delinquency—if there is insufficient balance on the date, the debit does not happen. But it removes an entire class of technical failures that plague those who charge by card.
In reconciliation, the gain is equally concrete. Pix carries identifiers that allow automatic matching of payment and customer. Anyone who has reconciled boleto manually knows the size of the relief. Less spreadsheet, less "who is this deposit from?", less team time spent reconciling statements.
The Collection Sequence Is Still Necessary
Beware of a trap: automating the debit does not automate the relationship. When a payment fails due to insufficient balance, someone needs to notify the customer and offer a way to regularize. This is where active channels come in. A polite reminder on the right day recovers more than three ignored emails.
Where Automatic Pix Shines
Some business models fit almost perfectly with Automatic Pix. I list the ones that appear most in my experience with SMEs:
- Gyms and studios. Fixed monthly fee, broad audience, many students without credit cards. Automatic Pix reduces churn due to payment failure and expands who can enroll.
- Schools and EAD courses. School fees and learning platform subscriptions are predictable recurrences. The reach without a card reaches families who would pay by boleto and forget.
- SaaS and subscription software. For affordable monthly plans, moving part of the card base to Pix can reduce acceptance cost and involuntary failure. Also see how we think about usage-based pricing in Unlimited Agents on WhatsApp: Why Paying per Employee Failed.
- Service providers with monthly fees. Accounting, maintenance, security, support plans. Continuous service pairs well with scheduled debit.
- Subscription clubs and communities. Low to medium value recurrence, where every friction point at checkout costs conversion.
The common thread among them is predictability. Automatic Pix yields more when the amount and date are stable. Highly variable charges require more care in prior communication.
Where It Still Doesn't Solve Everything
Being optimistic is not being naive. There are limits and points of attention you need to map before migrating the entire base.
First, account balance. Pix debits from checking or savings accounts. If there is no balance on the date, there is no revolving credit to cover it—unlike the card, which advances and pushes the bill to the statement. For some audiences, this rigidity increases failure on tight dates of the month.
Second, authorization management. The customer authorizes the recurrence and can revoke it. Your operation needs to handle revocations, changes in amount and dates clearly, or it becomes a source of dispute.
Third, fees. Don't make up numbers. Pix usually has a lower acceptance cost than cards, but the exact amount depends on your bank or payment service provider (PSP). Check this before promising savings to finance.
Fourth, provider maturity. Like any new feature, the quality of support for Automatic Pix varies among banks and gateways in 2026. Test with a slice of the base before full rollout.
Automatic Pix, Open Finance, and Drex: The Bigger Picture
Automatic Pix is not an isolated event. It is part of a Central Bank agenda that includes Pix 2.0, Open Finance, and Drex. Understanding the whole helps make decisions that don't age in six months.
Open Finance expands the sharing of information between accounts, investments, insurance, and credit—always with user consent. For billing, this points to a future where authorized financial data qualifies offers and reduces friction. Consent is the key: nothing moves without the customer allowing it.
Regarding Drex, it's worth clearing up the confusion. The project changed direction. The Central Bank abandoned the public blockchain—left Hyperledger Besu—and now focuses on registering and reconciling liens, i.e., tracking guarantees in the financial system, as well as interbank settlements. In the first phase, Drex does not replace Pix, does not give direct access to the common consumer, and does not implement programmable money or smart contracts.
Translation for the SME: in 2026, those who charge recurring payments should look at Automatic Pix as a concrete tool for today, and treat Drex as backstage infrastructure, not as a new payment method at checkout. Official details are at the Central Bank of Brazil.
How to Prepare Your Billing Operation
Migrating to Automatic Pix is more about process than technology. A lean roadmap to start without breaking what already works:
- Map your base by method. How many customers are on card, boleto, direct debit? Identify who would ask for Pix if they had the option.
- Talk to your PSP or bank. Confirm availability of Automatic Pix, actual fees, and how to handle authorization, revocation, and amount changes.
- Offer Automatic Pix as an option, not an imposition. Let the customer choose at sign-up and renewal. Conversion rises when there is choice.
- Set up the communication sequence. Define notices before the debit and recovery messages when there is insufficient balance. A reminder on the right day is worth more than a late charge.
- Test with a small group. Run a pilot, measure failure and satisfaction, adjust, then expand.
Communication is the weak link in most operations. Notifying the customer that the debit will occur, confirming when it occurred, and acting quickly when it fails does more for retention than switching gateways. Channels the customer already uses, like WhatsApp, usually have much higher read rates than email.
Conclusion: Charge Better, Notify Better
Automatic Pix is not a silver bullet, but it solves a real problem: providing automatic recurrence for those without a card, with a tendency for lower cost and cleaner reconciliation. For gyms, schools, EAD, SaaS, and service providers, it's worth entering 2026 with a pilot and measuring.
The next step is to combine recurring billing with a notification sequence on the right channel. At Agathas, we link billing to automatic reminders on WhatsApp to reduce involuntary failure and churn. If you want to understand the messaging track behind it, start with WhatsApp Business App vs Official API and see how AI agents already support businesses in customer service and payment recovery. Charging is only half the work. Notifying well is the other.
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