The Brazilian Continental Shelf Survey Programme (LEPLAC) identified the occurrence of large-scale mass-transport deposits on the southernmost limit of the Brazilian margin, based mainly on analyses of acoustic imagery. The mass-transport deposits, named the Chuí Megaslide Complex, comprise a stack of large translational slides that spread from the shelf break ~650 km downslope to ~4,900 m water depth, cutting into Pliocene-Quaternary sedimentary successions and strongly affecting both the margin morphology and regional depositional processes. The main headwall scarp is U-shaped, 400–500 m high, and extends c. 80 km downslope as a large elongated evacuated scar, 50–85 km wide. Outside this main failure scar, external scarps evidence a large area of erosion and faulted blocks, indicating ongoing retrogressive sediment disruption. Slide masses occur as a combination of variably deformed failed masses and debris flows, covering an area of ~150,000 km2. Main preconditioning parameters and the possible triggering mechanism for the Chui Megaslide Complex are likely a combination of a series of causative factors such as slope failure structurally-induced by gravity tectonics and high sediment influx into the shelf-edge and upper slope during the Early Miocene-Quaternary.