Summary. — There is a renewed global interest in support of family farming becoming a more competitive sector, contributing to poverty
alleviation, food security, and economic growth. This paper explores the development conditions faced by family farmers across
Brazil. We not only reveal a potential for development, represented by the great number of family-based rural households, but also present
several structural constraints faced by most family farmers, as well as great discrepancies among regions. We argue for encouraging
the existing family farming potential by designing policies that consciously target specific regional challenges and avoid excluding segments
not fitting into the modernization paradigm.