Trip Summary

Phase 1: Rio de Janeiro — the postcard city, done smart

Phase 2: Paraty — cobblestones, salt air, and slow history

Phase 3: Ilha Grande — beach logic and rainforest paths

Phase 4: São Paulo — Brazil’s modern brain

Phase 5: Foz do Iguaçu — the thunder of water

Itinerary

Arrival: Rio’s coastline, gently

Goal: Arrive safely, get oriented, and end the day with an easy ocean sunset.

Overview: Rio doesn’t really “welcome” you so much as it starts performing immediately: granite peaks, Atlantic light, and a shoreline built like a stage set. This first day is designed as a soft landing—minimal decisions, minimal walking, maximum reassurance. Copacabana and Ipanema were shaped into their modern form in the 20th century, when Rio’s beach culture became a kind of national language: promenades, kiosks, and the social ritual of watching the sea. Summer weather can pivot fast from blazing sun to a dramatic thunderstorm, so today stays flexible and forgiving. The only mission is to arrive intact, hydrate, and let your nervous system learn the city’s tempo.

14:00 — Rio de Janeiro–Galeão International Airport (GIG)

  • Land, withdraw a small amount of cash at an ATM inside the terminal (bank-branded), and buy water immediately.
  • Order Uber/99 inside the app and verify plate/model before entering; sit in the back seat.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Stay inside the terminal longer—grab a coffee and wait out the first storm; Summer downpours can be short and intense.

16:30 — Hotel in Copacabana or Ipanema

  • Check in, test the AC (you need it), and do a quick 'essentials unpack' so you’re not living out of chaos.
  • Ask reception about safe walking blocks nearby and the best way to reach the metro entrance.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Treat the lobby like a base; plan tomorrow, do laundry hand-wash, and let the humidity pass.

18:00 — Copacabana Promenade (Av. Atlântica)

  • Stroll the black-and-white wave mosaic designed in the Portuguese pavement tradition; it’s urban art you walk on.
  • Buy coconut water from a busy kiosk and watch the beach culture at sunset—families, runners, and the city’s nightly exhale.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Visit a classic café/padaria nearby for pão de queijo and espresso instead. Low Energy/Sick Day: Skip the walk and just watch the changing light from a sheltered spot near the hotel.
📝 Notes

Modularity: Fixed (international arrival day). Use Uber/99 from the airport; do not accept unsolicited ride offers. Keep passports/cards on your person, not in a visible backpack pocket. Heat rule: shower, rehydrate, then go outside.

Centro Time Travel: books, banks, and belle époque

Goal: See Rio’s historic core through architecture, literature, and coffee culture.

Overview: Rio’s Centro is the city with the mask off: not the beach postcard, but a layered capital shaped by empire, slavery, migration, and finance. You’ll walk streets that once served the Portuguese royal court after 1808, then later the young republic, and now the daily life of millions. The Real Gabinete Português de Leitura is a gothic fantasy of carved wood and stained glass—built by the Portuguese community in the late 19th century—designed to impress and to preserve language as identity. Nearby, the CCBB occupies an early-20th-century banking palace that now hosts art, cinema, and exhibitions; it’s a perfect summer refuge because it’s cultured, cool, and indoors. The strategy today is simple: do “big indoors” during the hottest hours, move between venues by Uber/99 if streets feel empty, and keep your phone out of sight outside.

09:30 — Confeitaria Colombo (Centro)

  • Start with a classic Rio ritual: coffee and something sweet in a café that feels like a time capsule of the 1890s—mirrors, dark wood, and the gentle clatter of porcelain.
  • Order strategy: one savory + one sweet to share, and a strong espresso. Hydrate alongside it.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Perfect rain activity—linger longer, then continue indoors to museums.

10:45 — Real Gabinete Português de Leitura

  • Enter quietly and look up first: the reading room rises like a theatrical set, a neo-Manueline (Portuguese late-gothic revival) celebration of carved detail.
  • Best viewing trick: stand near the center aisle so the symmetry frames the stained glass and balcony levels.
  • Etiquette: this is a working library; speak softly and keep bags close.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Still ideal—this is one of the best 'storm shelters' in the city.

12:30 — Centro lunch (comida a quilo)

  • Eat where locals eat: a by-weight buffet lets Traveler A avoid seafood entirely while Traveler B can explore more options without forcing a fish-only venue.
  • Taste strategy: beans + rice + one grilled protein + salad; add farofa for texture.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Choose a shopping-mall food court or well-lit indoor buffet to avoid wet streets.

14:00 — CCBB Rio de Janeiro (Rua Primeiro de Março)

  • Spend the afternoon in the former banking palace turned cultural center—cool air, rotating exhibitions, and often excellent cinema programming.
  • Crowd strategy: go first to the upper floors, then drift down as the late-afternoon rush arrives.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: This is the rainy-day plan—stay longer, add a film if the timing works.

17:30 — Praça XV / Paço Imperial area

  • Walk a short loop of the historic squares as the heat eases. This is where Rio’s political story once concentrated: colonial administration, imperial ceremony, and later republican streetscapes.
  • Keep valuables minimal and leave before dusk.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Take Uber/99 back to the hotel and do a relaxed evening meal at a nearby padaria or calm restaurant. Low Energy/Sick Day: Skip the walk and go straight back after CCBB.
📝 Notes

Modularity: Moveable (city exploration). High-alert: Centro is best by day; avoid wandering after dark. Phone rule: step into a shop to check maps.

Rainforest Rio: Tijuca + the Botanical Garden

Goal: Experience Atlantic Forest nature without leaving the city.

Overview: Rio’s most underrated miracle is that a genuine rainforest lives inside the city, not as a decorative park but as a living Atlantic Forest ecosystem. Tijuca National Park exists partly because 19th-century deforestation for coffee and charcoal threatened Rio’s water supply—so the forest was methodically replanted under imperial orders, a rare early example of large-scale ecological restoration. The Vista Chinesa pavilion, built in the early 1900s, is a whimsical hilltop viewpoint where granite mountains and city grid collide in one wide panorama. Later, the Jardim Botânico—founded in 1808 in the Portuguese royal era—feels like a scientific garden and a shaded cathedral of palms, with orchids and giant water lilies tucked into humid corners. Today is designed to be outdoors early, indoors or shaded at midday, and always ready to pivot if summer rain arrives like a curtain drop.

07:30 — Hotel pickup (Copacabana/Ipanema)

  • Early start to beat heat and crowds. Eat something small but real (pão de queijo + fruit + coffee).
  • Order Uber/99 to a Tijuca viewpoint route; confirm the driver follows the in-app route.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Delay the start by 1–2 hours and swap the morning for an indoor museum (Museu do Amanhã or MAR), then do the Botanical Garden later if skies clear.

08:30 — Vista Chinesa (Tijuca National Park)

  • Arrive while the air is still cool; the viewpoint gives you Rio’s geography lesson in one glance—Sugarloaf’s silhouette, the lagoon system, and the ocean rim.
  • Photo strategy: step slightly away from the central crowd cluster; the best framing often happens from the edges where you can include both forest canopy and city.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Visit Museu do Amanhã instead. Low Energy/Sick Day: Skip viewpoints entirely and do the Botanical Garden only (flat, shaded, benches everywhere).

10:30 — Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro

  • Walk the imperial palm avenue like you’re entering a botanical temple; the symmetry and scale are deliberately theatrical.
  • Seek the quieter corners: orchid house, lily ponds, and the shaded paths where birds and monkeys sometimes appear.
  • Etiquette: keep distance from wildlife; do not feed animals.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Visit CCBB or Museu do Amanhã for a fully indoor day; return to the garden on a clearer morning.

13:00 — Jardim Botânico / Lagoa lunch zone

  • Choose a simple lunch nearby (kilo restaurant or calm café). Prioritize shade and hydration over culinary heroics.
  • Post-lunch strategy: treat the early afternoon as a heat-avoidance window.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Long lunch + dessert in a comfortable café, then Uber back; thunderstorms often peak mid-afternoon.

16:30 — Lagoa Rodrigo de Freitas (easy loop section)

  • A gentle late-afternoon stroll along the lagoon—this is Rio’s 'local exercise runway' and feels safer when many people are out.
  • Keep it short; save energy for tomorrow’s peaks.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Go back to the hotel for a rest and do an early dinner nearby. Low Energy/Sick Day: Nap and order a simple meal close to the hotel.
📝 Notes

Modularity: Moveable. Outdoor day with rain-pivot built in. Bring: water, sun protection, light rain layer, and insect repellent. Use Uber/99 for Tijuca viewpoints; avoid isolated bus stops.

Granite and sky: Sugarloaf + Santa Teresa

Goal: Get a classic Rio panorama, then switch to bohemian hillside streets.

Overview: Sugarloaf (Pão de Açúcar) looks like it was designed by a landscape architect with a sense of drama, but it’s pure geology—granite rising straight out of the bay. The cable car system, inaugurated in the early 1900s, turned that geology into one of Brazil’s earliest modern tourist spectacles: a mechanical glide from sea level to sky. From the top, Rio’s logic becomes clear: mountains partition neighborhoods, beaches form the city’s social spine, and the bay holds everything in a glittering curve. Later you’ll move to Santa Teresa, a hilltop neighborhood that kept a slower, older rhythm—trams, steep streets, and pockets of art. The day is active but structured: Sugarloaf early or late for better light, and Santa Teresa with caution (it’s charming, but you don’t want to drift into empty streets).

08:30 — Urca - Parque Bondinho (Sugarloaf)

  • Arrive early for cooler air and shorter lines. The first ascent is to Morro da Urca, then onward to Sugarloaf proper.
  • Best view trick: at the top, walk a little away from the main selfie cluster; the bay and city lines open up with just a few steps.
  • Bring: water, hat, and something that can survive spray if wind kicks up.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Visit Museu do Amanhã or CCBB instead. Low Energy/Sick Day: Go only to Morro da Urca (first stage), enjoy the view, and head back down before fatigue hits.

11:30 — Urca neighborhood

  • Short coastal wander in Urca’s calmer streets—this area feels more residential and less chaotic.
  • Lunch nearby at a non-seafood-focused place (look for grilled chicken/beef plates and salads).
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Take Uber directly to an indoor museum (MAR or Museu de Arte Moderna) and keep walking minimal.

14:30 — Santa Teresa (arrival point by Uber/99)

  • Explore Santa Teresa’s hillside atmosphere: old mansions, leafy views, and street art that feels less like performance and more like neighborhood expression.
  • If the historic tram is operating, treat it as heritage transport—short ride, scenic windows, and a glimpse of Rio’s 19th-century transit imagination.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Do the indoor circuit—CCBB cinema or a museum—then return. Low Energy/Sick Day: Skip Santa Teresa and do a long café session near your hotel.

16:30 — Escadaria Selarón (Lapa/Santa Teresa edge)

  • See the mosaic staircase created over decades by artist Jorge Selarón—a living collage of tiles that turned a public stairway into an obsessive artwork.
  • Photo strategy: go late afternoon for softer light, but leave before evening crowds change the vibe.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Visit the Real Gabinete or a nearby cultural center instead. Low Energy/Sick Day: View the first section only, then Uber back.
📝 Notes

Modularity: Moveable. Avoid buying tickets from street sellers; use official channels. High-alert: Santa Teresa is safest in daytime; use Uber/99 for transitions and avoid quiet lanes.

Chill Day: beach logic and café wandering

Goal: Recover: low steps, no early alarm, and let Rio be easy.

Overview: This is your scheduled recovery day—Rio can be intense, and the best way to enjoy it is to treat rest as part of the plan, not as a failure of ambition. Ipanema and Leblon offer a softer, more daytime-friendly version of the city: cafés, shaded streets, and beach views that don’t require heroic logistics. The beach culture here is a social ritual with rules: keep valuables minimal, pay attention to your surroundings, and choose busy areas with families. A chill day also makes you smarter for the next leg: Paraty is a travel day and your body will thank you for banking energy now. Think of today as letting the city’s atmosphere do the work while you do almost nothing.

Morning — Ipanema cafés (near Praça General Osório)

  • Sleep in. Do a slow breakfast: coffee, fruit, pão de queijo, and a second coffee because Brazil.
  • People-watch—Rio’s beach neighborhoods are a daily theater of dogs, surfboards, and small rituals.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Turn it into a museum-and-café day—Museu do Amanhã or CCBB, then a long dessert stop. Low Energy/Sick Day: Stay in, hydrate, and do a full reset with naps.

Afternoon — Ipanema Beach (Posto 9 area, daytime only)

  • Beach time with minimalist gear: towel, water, sunscreen, and almost no valuables.
  • Swim only where lifeguards are visible and the sea looks calm; Atlantic currents can be sneaky.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Visit a bookstore or indoor mall café and keep it simple. Low Energy/Sick Day: Skip the beach; do a short walk and return.

Evening — Leblon / Ipanema dinner zone

  • Early dinner at a calm, non-seafood-exclusive restaurant—look for grilled meats, salads, and Brazilian comfort plates.
  • Pack lightly for tomorrow’s bus day; confirm your ticket and pick-up point.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Uber door-to-door; avoid walking in wet, quiet streets at night.
📝 Notes

Modularity: Moveable (Chill Day, fixed by the 4-1 rule). Safety: bring only what you need to the beach; leave passports in the hotel safe if available.

Costa Verde glide: Rio → Paraty

Goal: Transfer smoothly to Paraty and settle into the old-town rhythm.

Overview: The coast between Rio and Paraty is called the Costa Verde for a reason: Atlantic Forest clings to mountains right up to the ocean, and the highway threads between cliff, sea, and sudden bursts of beach. Paraty itself feels like a preserved diagram of colonial Brazil—cobblestone streets engineered to flood at high tide (a sanitation hack from an older era), whitewashed buildings, and churches built as much for social order as for worship. Historically, Paraty mattered because it sat on the gold route—goods and people moved through here toward Rio, and the town’s architecture still carries that wealth in restrained, practical forms. Today is about arriving without friction: bus comfort, luggage control, then a short evening stroll as the heat softens. After Rio’s scale, Paraty’s smallness is a relief.

08:30 — Rio de Janeiro - Novo Rio Bus Station

  • Arrive early, use the official terminal areas only, and keep bags zipped and in front of you.
  • If needed, use the station’s left-luggage service to avoid dragging bags while you buy snacks or coffee.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Stay inside the terminal until boarding; avoid hovering outside in wet, low-visibility areas.

09:30 — Intercity bus (Rio → Paraty)

  • Settle in for a scenic drive: rainforest slopes, coastal glimpses, and the kind of humidity that makes everything smell alive.
  • Food strategy: bring simple snacks; avoid messy food that attracts attention.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Same plan—just expect slower traffic and keep a buffer before any check-in deadlines.

14:30 — Paraty - hotel check-in (Centro edge / Jabaquara)

  • Check in, verify AC, and ask where the nearest ATM and safest evening walking route is.
  • Switch to a smaller daypack; the old town is cobblestone and wheel-hostile.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: If streets are flooding (it happens), do an indoor reset: shower, laundry, and a calm dinner nearby.

17:30 — Paraty Centro Histórico (first loop)

  • Do a gentle orientation loop: note the churches, the geometry of the streets, and the way the town’s light changes as sun drops behind mountains.
  • Eat early at a simple restaurant with clear non-seafood options—galinhada or grilled meats are your safest bets.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Visit Casa da Cultura (if open) and linger indoors. Low Energy/Sick Day: Skip the walk; eat close to the hotel.
📝 Notes

Modularity: Fixed (transfer day). Keep valuables on you during bus travel. If you arrive early, use luggage storage (hotel or a storage partner) so you can explore hands-free.

Paraty’s gold-route time capsule

Goal: Understand Paraty’s history through its streets, churches, and coastal fort.

Overview: Paraty looks quaint, but it’s also a map of colonial power: churches divided by brotherhoods, streets built for control and commerce, and a port that once pushed gold toward the imperial center. The town’s relative preservation is partly an accident of economics—when routes shifted, Paraty was bypassed, leaving its architecture to age rather than be replaced. Walking here is like reading a built document: thick walls, simple façades, and details that reveal who held status and who was excluded. The Igreja de Santa Rita, often photographed for its seafront charm, is also a reminder that Paraty’s wealth was inseparable from slavery and maritime trade. Today’s strategy is to explore early, rest at midday, and return for a golden-hour stroll when the stones cool and the town feels most alive.

08:30 — Centro Histórico - main church circuit

  • Start early to have the cobblestones mostly to yourselves; morning light makes the white façades glow.
  • Visit a few key churches (choose 2–3): focus on interior woodwork, baroque altars, and how each space signals a different social community.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Do an indoor-focused loop—church interiors + Casa da Cultura museum.

11:00 — Forte Defensor Perpétuo (fort viewpoint)

  • Walk up to the small fort for a harbor view that explains the town’s defensive logic.
  • Take it slowly; the hill is short but humid.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Casa da Cultura (museum) instead. Low Energy/Sick Day: Skip the climb; stay flat in the old town and take long café breaks.

13:00 — Paraty lunch (kilo restaurant)

  • Go practical: by-weight buffet, lots of salad, and a grilled protein—this is your energy insurance.
  • Heat strategy: plan a midday rest after lunch; Paraty humidity can feel like a warm blanket.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Long lunch indoors, then a slow museum visit.

16:30 — Waterfront at Igreja de Santa Rita

  • Golden-hour waterfront stroll; watch the boats and mountains frame the town like a painting.
  • If the tide is high, notice how water can creep into the old streets—an old engineering solution for flushing waste that also shapes the town’s character.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Find a covered café and listen to the rain on colonial roofs. Low Energy/Sick Day: Sunset from a sheltered spot near the hotel.
📝 Notes

Modularity: Moveable. Shopping is not the goal: treat artisan shops as visual texture, not tasks. Keep your phone away from street edges; step into a doorway to check directions.

Paraty by water: islands, coves, and caiçara coast

Goal: Get a salt-water day—swim, snorkel lightly, and see Paraty’s coastline properly.

Overview: Paraty makes the most sense from the water: the town sits at the edge of a bay scattered with islands, coves, and the green wall of Atlantic Forest. The coastline is shaped by caiçara culture—communities formed from Indigenous, African, and European roots—where fishing and small-scale living met difficult geography. A boat day here isn’t about luxury; it’s about moving slowly between clear water and forest shade, letting the landscape do the talking. In February, the sea is warm and inviting, but storms can blow in quickly, so the best plan is a morning departure with a flexible route. You’ll aim for snorkeling in calm coves (no scuba) and keep expectations realistic: visibility varies, but the feeling of floating in warm water with rainforest around you is the real point.

08:30 — Paraty pier / tour meeting point

  • Check in with your operator and confirm the route is flexible based on weather.
  • Safety: keep phones in a dry bag; wear sandals with grip for wet decks.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Visit Casa da Cultura + churches + a long lunch instead. Low Energy/Sick Day: Skip the tour and do a gentle beach hour at Praia do Pontal (very close, low effort).

09:30 — Paraty Bay (islands and coves)

  • Swim stops in sheltered water; keep snorkeling simple and stick near the boat if currents pick up.
  • Taste strategy: a simple lunch stop onshore is fine—just avoid seafood-only venues so Traveler A has real options.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Do an indoor heritage afternoon (museum + café). Low Energy/Sick Day: Replace boat day with a taxi to a nearby easy beach and return early.

16:30 — Paraty old town (post-boat reset)

  • Shower, hydrate, and do a short sunset loop—boat days feel bigger than they look on paper.
  • Early dinner and pack for tomorrow’s island transfer.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Long dinner indoors and an early night.
📝 Notes

Modularity: Moveable but weather-dependent. Choose smaller boats if possible for a calmer experience. Bring: reef-safe sunscreen, towel, water, snacks, and a cheap dry bag. Avoid boats that push heavy alcohol party vibes.

Island transfer: Paraty → Ilha Grande

Goal: Reach Ilha Grande smoothly and learn the island’s pedestrian logistics.

Overview: Today you trade cobblestones for sand. Ilha Grande (Big Island) feels like Brazil hitting pause: no cars in Abraão, forested hills rising behind the village, and beaches that reward even minimal effort. The island has a layered story—once used for quarantine and even a notorious prison on the far side—before tourism and conservation reshaped it into a nature-focused destination. Your arrival point, Vila do Abraão, is essentially a backpacker port with a gentle soul; it’s busy but manageable when you keep your luggage light and your expectations calm. The logistics are the main thing: ferry/fast boat, then carrying bags on foot to your pousada. Once you’re checked in, the best move is a simple sunset swim and an early night.

08:00 — Paraty hotel checkout

  • Checkout and travel with a smaller daypack accessible (water, documents, snacks).
  • Confirm boat departure time and pier location; leave extra buffer for coastal traffic.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Keep electronics double-bagged; rain + boat spray is a team-up attack.

10:30 — Conceição de Jacareí pier

  • Arrive early, find the correct operator, and avoid random 'helpers' trying to steer you to unofficial boats.
  • If needed, use luggage storage options nearby so you can board without hauling everything.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Wait indoors/under cover and board carefully—wet docks get slippery.

11:30 — Fast boat to Vila do Abraão

  • Short, splashy crossing. Keep phones sealed; keep sunglasses secured.
  • Enjoy the first view of the island’s forested slopes—this is Atlantic Forest meeting ocean in its most literal form.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Same plan; just expect wet landings and bring a light rain shell.

13:00 — Vila do Abraão (arrival + check-in walk)

  • Walk to your pousada; Abraão is pedestrian, so everything is carried.
  • Check AC/fan and mosquito screens immediately.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Use a poncho and take it slow. Low Energy/Sick Day: Skip any exploring; nap and hydrate.

17:30 — Praia do Abraão (main beach)

  • Easy sunset swim close to shore; it’s a gentle way to mark arrival.
  • Dinner in the village: choose places with clear chicken/beef/veg options.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Café + early dinner under cover. Low Energy/Sick Day: Room service/nearby takeaway and sleep.
📝 Notes

Modularity: Fixed (transfer day). Hands-free tip: if you have bulky luggage, store it on the mainland (Angra/Conceição) via a storage partner and bring only essentials to the island.

Chill Day: Ilha Grande at hammock speed

Goal: Recover fully—minimal walking, maximum water-and-shade.

Overview: A proper island day is not a checklist; it’s a mood. Today is your scheduled recovery day, and Ilha Grande is perfect for it because the best experiences are low-effort: warm water, shade, and the sound of forest insects doing their complicated tiny jobs. Abraão’s small beaches nearby—like Praia Preta—offer a “micro-adventure” without committing to a big hike. The cultural trick is to adopt Brazilian beach pacing: do less at midday, drink something cold, and accept that time is not a problem to solve. This rest day also sets you up for tomorrow’s more ambitious beach choice. Treat your body like it’s part of the itinerary—because it is.

Morning — Vila do Abraão cafés

  • Sleep in, then do a slow breakfast with coffee and fruit.
  • Ask your pousada what the easiest nearby beach walk is given tide and weather.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Do a long breakfast + reading day; rain on a tropical island can be oddly soothing. Low Energy/Sick Day: Stay in, hydrate, and keep meals very simple.

Afternoon — Praia Preta (or nearest easy beach)

  • Short, low-effort walk and a long swim. Stay close to shore and avoid isolated stretches.
  • Hydration strategy: coconut water + water; sun strategy: shade first, sun second.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Visit a small local museum or simply café-hop in Abraão instead. Low Energy/Sick Day: Skip the beach and rest in the coolest room you can find.

Evening — Vila do Abraão dinner

  • Early dinner and an early night. Tomorrow has options that can become a real hike if you choose.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Same plan—keep it close and calm.
📝 Notes

Modularity: Moveable (Chill Day, fixed by the 4-1 rule). Bring only essentials to the beach; leave passport locked up.

Choose your island: Lopes Mendes or the easy-beach plan

Goal: Get one big iconic beach experience—scaled to your energy and the weather.

Overview: Lopes Mendes is the island’s legend: a long sweep of pale sand backed by forest, often ranked among Brazil’s most beautiful beaches. The romance is real, but the logistics are also real—getting there can involve a hike, heat, and humidity that turns “nice walk” into “why am I sweating from places I didn’t know existed.” The smart way is to treat today as a choose-your-own-effort adventure: either commit early to Lopes Mendes, or choose an easier beach plan and keep the day joyful. Atlantic Forest trails are alive, but they can also be slippery after rain; summer storms make footing unpredictable. The best beach day is the one you can enjoy without overpaying in exhaustion.

07:30 — Vila do Abraão (departure point)

  • Early decision point: Lopes Mendes (commit early) or Easy Beach Plan (choose calm).
  • Pack minimal: water, snacks, sunscreen, a light rain layer, and a dry bag.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Choose the Easy Beach Plan and stay near Abraão. Low Energy/Sick Day: Skip hiking entirely and do a short swim + long lunch in the village.

08:30 — Trail/boat route toward Lopes Mendes

  • If doing Lopes Mendes: go early to reduce heat stress and crowds.
  • Trail strategy: slow pace, frequent water sips, and shoes with grip; the forest can be slick after rain.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Visit sheltered beaches near Abraão instead. Low Energy/Sick Day: Take a short taxi-boat (if available) to a nearby calm cove and return early.

11:30 — Lopes Mendes Beach

  • Swim with caution: waves can be stronger here; stay where the water looks calm and other swimmers are present.
  • Best experience strategy: walk a little away from the main arrival point for quieter sand, then commit to doing absolutely nothing for a while.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Skip Lopes Mendes and do an indoor/café day in Abraão. Low Energy/Sick Day: Replace with Praia Preta + long lunch and call it a win.

16:30 — Vila do Abraão (return + recovery)

  • Return before dark, shower, hydrate, and do an early dinner. Tomorrow is a long transfer day to São Paulo.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Same plan; ensure electronics are dry and repack carefully.
📝 Notes

Modularity: Moveable. This is the high-intensity day—use the Low Energy/Sick Day alternative if needed. Bring: water, snacks, and a dry bag.

Big transfer: Ilha Grande → São Paulo (linear route)

Goal: Reach São Paulo without backtracking to Rio, then recover.

Overview: Today is the “logistics spine” of the trip: you leave island calm and enter Brazil’s biggest metropolis. The route is intentionally linear—boat to Angra dos Reis, then a long daytime bus to São Paulo—so you don’t waste time backtracking to Rio. São Paulo is Brazil’s economic and cultural engine, a city built from waves of migration: Italian, Japanese, Syrian-Lebanese, Northeastern Brazilian, and many more, all layered into food, neighborhoods, and language. Arriving after a long bus, your best strategy is a simple evening: check in, eat close to the hotel, and sleep. Summer weather can slow roads, so buffer time is your friend. Think of this day as paying the toll that lets you spend your energy on museums tomorrow.

07:30 — Vila do Abraão pier

  • Board an early boat to Angra dos Reis. Keep a dry bag ready; splash happens.
  • Snack strategy: buy simple food before departure; options on the mainland can be chaotic.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Expect delays; keep patience and keep electronics sealed.

09:00 — Angra dos Reis terminal area

  • Transfer to the São Paulo bus. If you have time, use luggage storage so you can get coffee without dragging bags.
  • Avoid isolated streets; stay in official terminal areas.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Stay indoors in the terminal until boarding.

10:30 — Intercity bus (Angra → São Paulo, Terminal Tietê)

  • Long daytime ride. Keep passports/cards in a zipped pocket on your body.
  • Hydrate and rest—this is an energy conservation exercise.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Same plan—just assume slower traffic and late arrival.

18:30 — Hotel in Paulista/Consolação/Jardins

  • Check in, confirm AC, and keep the evening calm.
  • Dinner at a good padaria or simple restaurant nearby—avoid wandering far.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Uber door-to-door for dinner; keep it low friction.
📝 Notes

Modularity: Fixed (transfer day). Keep valuables on you; do not flash phones at bus terminals. Arrive, eat, sleep.

São Paulo: modern Brazil in concrete and art

Goal: Do MASP and one more cultural or green-space anchor, depending on weather.

Overview: São Paulo doesn’t seduce like Rio; it convinces. It’s a city of work, ideas, and scale—less scenic at first glance, but profoundly alive once you tune to its frequency. MASP, designed by Lina Bo Bardi and opened in its iconic suspended form in 1968, is a statement in reinforced concrete and cultural ambition: a museum held above the ground by bold beams, leaving a public plaza beneath. Inside, the collection is famously eclectic, and the building itself teaches you how modern Brazil imagined itself: international, experimental, and public-facing. After MASP, you’ll choose your second anchor based on weather: Ibirapuera Park for open-air relief, or indoor museums around the park for a rain-safe cultural afternoon. The strategy is to move by metro/Uber, keep phones away on sidewalks, and enjoy the city’s food as part of the museum experience.

10:00 — MASP (Avenida Paulista)

  • Arrive near opening; enjoy the building as much as the art—stand under the suspended span to feel the architectural audacity.
  • Crowd strategy: start with your must-see galleries first, then drift.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Perfect rainy-day anchor—extend your time here and add the café.

13:00 — Paulista lunch zone

  • Lunch nearby: choose a calm, non-seafood-exclusive spot or a high-quality padaria.
  • Taste strategy: try a 'virado à paulista' plate if you find it—regional and deeply satisfying.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Long lunch indoors; avoid long street walks with umbrellas and exposed phones.

15:00 — Parque Ibirapuera (or museum cluster nearby)

  • If weather is good: stroll shaded paths, watch locals cycle, and let the city’s intensity soften into greenery.
  • If you prefer indoors: choose a museum near the park for a cultural afternoon without heat stress.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Visit an indoor museum instead of the park. Low Energy/Sick Day: Do a single café session + short walk and return early.

18:30 — Paulista/Consolação dinner

  • Early dinner and an early night—tomorrow is a flight day to Foz.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Uber door-to-door; keep it simple.
📝 Notes

Modularity: Moveable. High-alert: central SP streets can be opportunistic for theft—use metro + Uber and avoid displaying phones outside.

Flight to the frontier: São Paulo → Foz do Iguaçu

Goal: Arrive in Foz, set up a comfortable base, and plan the falls day.

Overview: Foz do Iguaçu is a border city in the best sense of the word: languages overlap, cuisines blend, and geography becomes the main character. The reason you’re here is the falls, but the supporting cast matters too—logistics, safety, and timing determine whether the experience feels effortless or chaotic. Today is built as a clean transfer: airport, hotel, a simple meal, and an early night. The falls work best in the morning, before heat and tour buses stack up. Because this region sits near international borders, the smart approach is to keep movements intentional, use official transport, and skip anything that feels like a “quick deal” offered by strangers. Once you’re settled, the only task is to pre-load tomorrow with confidence: tickets, route, and rain gear.

08:30 — São Paulo airport (CGH or GRU)

  • Arrive early; keep valuables secured and phones away from edges in crowded areas.
  • Fly to IGU with a buffer—summer storms can delay flights.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Flights still run; just expect turbulence and delays. Keep snacks and water.

12:00 — Foz do Iguaçu (hotel check-in)

  • Check in, test AC, and confirm how to reach the National Park (Uber/99 or bus).
  • Buy a poncho or rain layer if you don’t already have one—the falls are a waterproof event.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Same plan; just keep movements door-to-door.

16:30 — Centro / hotel area

  • Low-key afternoon: coffee, an early dinner, and a route check for tomorrow.
  • Safety: avoid wandering far at night; keep it calm.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Stay in, rest, and watch weather radar; storms can clear fast.
📝 Notes

Modularity: Fixed (transfer day). Use Uber/99 or official taxis. Avoid unsolicited offers for tours at the airport.

Chill Day: Itaipu scale and sunset calm

Goal: Recover before the falls: minimal walking, maximal scale.

Overview: Itaipu is one of those human projects that feels almost mythic: a hydroelectric dam so large it reshaped landscapes and politics, a reminder that Brazil and Paraguay share not just a border but a power source. On a chill day, it’s perfect—mostly seated, structured, and oddly meditative in its scale. You’ll see concrete and water framed as engineering theater, with viewpoints designed to make you understand magnitude without needing to walk miles. The rest of the day stays gentle: a calm meal, a quiet viewpoint at sunset, and a full recharge before tomorrow’s natural spectacle. Treat this as your body’s reset button. The falls deserve your energy; today exists to protect it.

10:30 — Itaipu Binacional (Panoramic Tour)

  • Arrive late-morning (no early alarm) and join the panoramic tour—departures are frequent and the experience is designed for low effort.
  • Bring water; the sun can still bite even when you’re mostly seated.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Visit the Ecomuseu de Itaipu instead for a more indoor-focused experience. Low Energy/Sick Day: Skip Itaipu and do a long café + nap day near the hotel.

14:00 — Lunch in Centro (non-seafood-friendly)

  • Choose a calm restaurant with clear grilled meat/chicken/veg options; avoid seafood-only places.
  • Post-lunch rest: treat it as mandatory, not optional.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Long lunch indoors, then return to hotel to rest.

17:30 — Marco das Três Fronteiras (sunset viewpoint)

  • Easy sunset viewpoint where rivers define borders and the light does most of the work.
  • Go early, leave before it gets too late, and use Uber/99 back.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Skip the viewpoint and do an early dinner instead. Low Energy/Sick Day: Stay in and sleep early for the falls.
📝 Notes

Modularity: Moveable (Chill Day, fixed by the 4-1 rule). Keep valuables minimal; use Uber/99 door-to-door.

Iguaçu Falls: the wide-angle thunder

Goal: Experience the falls at peak impact with smart timing and safety.

Overview: Iguaçu is less a waterfall and more a system—hundreds of falls braided into a canyon, with mist rising like weather and rainbows appearing as if the air is performing a trick. The Brazilian side is famous for the panorama: a sweeping, cinematic view where you understand the scale in one glance, then walk closer until the sound becomes physical. The park infrastructure is designed to move people efficiently (buses, trails, viewpoints), which is good—use it rather than improvising. Summer heat and sudden storms can make the spray feel like a monsoon, so dress for wetness and bring a waterproof layer. The best strategy is early entry, do the main trail before crowds stack up, then decide whether you want an optional extra (like a shorter secondary trail) based on energy.

08:30 — Hotel departure (Foz do Iguaçu)

  • Early start to beat heat and tour buses. Uber/99 to the park entrance is the lowest-hassle option.
  • Pack: poncho, water, sunscreen, and a dry bag.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Go anyway—rain often makes the falls more dramatic. Low Energy/Sick Day: Do only the main viewpoint section and skip extra trails.

09:30 — Parque Nacional do Iguaçu - Visitor Center

  • Enter, orient, and take the official park transport to the trailhead. Do not follow unofficial guides offering shortcuts.
  • Safety: keep valuables minimal and zipped; crowds are where opportunists work.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Stay on official paved paths; avoid any muddy side trails.

10:30 — Trilha das Cataratas (main panoramic trail)

  • Walk the main trail slowly: the experience escalates from 'pretty' to 'absurdly powerful' as you approach the final platforms.
  • Photo strategy: wipe lens often; mist is constant. For the biggest roar, linger near the final walkway where spray becomes a full-body event.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Keep poncho on and embrace it—this is basically an attraction built of water. Low Energy/Sick Day: Shorten the walk and take more seated breaks; the park transport helps you avoid extra distance.

13:00 — Porto Canoas / park lunch area

  • Lunch inside the park for convenience; choose non-seafood options (grilled meats, salads, rice/beans).
  • Hydration check: refill water before returning.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Longer indoor lunch and wait out the heaviest downpour.

15:00 — Parque das Aves (optional add-on, near the park)

  • Optional if energy is good: a shaded, mostly flat trail through aviaries—excellent if you want nature without more hiking.
  • If you’re tired, skip it with zero guilt; the falls are the main event.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: This still works in rain (covered sections), but you may prefer to return and rest. Low Energy/Sick Day: Skip and go back to hotel for recovery.
📝 Notes

Modularity: Moveable but strongly recommended. Fraud warning: buy tickets only from official channels and ignore lookalike websites. Bring: poncho, water protection for electronics, and shoes with grip.

Departure: Foz → London (keep it simple)

Goal: Travel home safely with generous buffers and minimal hassle.

Overview: Departure days are not “wasted” days; they’re the part where travel either stays calm or turns into chaos. The smart move is to treat today like a sequence of small, controllable steps: hotel to airport, airport to connection, connection to long-haul. Because international flights to London from Brazil are often overnight by necessity, the goal is not to avoid night travel at all costs—it’s to avoid unnecessary stress inside that night travel. Keep layovers generous, avoid last-minute terminal sprints, and assume summer weather can delay domestic legs. Eat a steady meal before the long-haul and hydrate like it’s your job. Your job today is not sightseeing; it’s arriving intact.

Morning — Hotel checkout (Foz do Iguaçu)

  • Pack, double-check documents, and leave early. Keep liquids and snacks accessible.
  • Uber/99 to IGU; verify driver details in-app.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Add extra buffer time; storms can slow airport operations.

12:00 — Foz do Iguaçu Airport (IGU)

  • Domestic flight to São Paulo for international connection (most routings). Keep your connection buffer generous.
  • Airport strategy: charge devices, refill water after security, and keep valuables in zipped pockets.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: Expect delays; stay calm and prioritize making the connection safely over rushing.

Evening — São Paulo airport (GRU) - international departure

  • Board the long-haul to London. Sleep strategy: eat lightly, hydrate, then attempt sleep early.
  • Arrival logistics: keep one warm layer accessible; cabins can be cold.
  • Rain Plan: Rainy Day: If delays cascade, rebook through official airline channels only; ignore third-party solicitors.
📝 Notes

Modularity: Fixed (international departure). Keep passports/cards on body. Use Uber/99 to the airport. Avoid unsolicited 'help' at airports.

Key Bookings

Flights

Flight Pending

London → Rio de Janeiro (GIG)

Departs Jan 30
Arrives Jan 30

International arrival into Brazil. Aim for daytime arrival; avoid tight connections because summer storms can ripple delays.

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Flight Pending

São Paulo (CGH/GRU) → Foz do Iguaçu (IGU)

Departs Feb 12
Arrives Feb 12

Domestic hop. Prefer morning or early afternoon to keep the evening calm.

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Flight Pending

Foz do Iguaçu (IGU) → London (via São Paulo)

Departs Feb 15
Arrives Feb 16

International departure. Most routings are overnight by physics and time zones; keep layovers generous and avoid late-night city transfers.

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Hotels (Private Rooms, Clean, Strong AC)

Hotel Pending

Rio de Janeiro base (Copacabana or Ipanema)

Check-in Jan 30
Check-out Feb 04

Look for: strong AC, blackout curtains, 24h reception, high review score, walkable to beach but not directly above a loud nightlife strip.

BRL 3,200

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Hotel Pending

Paraty base (Centro Histórico edge or Jabaquara)

Check-in Feb 04
Check-out Feb 07

Look for: AC, quiet nights, close enough to walk into the old town but not inside the no-car cobblestone core if you have wheeled luggage.

BRL 1,500

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Hotel Pending

Ilha Grande base (Vila do Abraão)

Check-in Feb 07
Check-out Feb 10

Look for: AC (or at least a powerful fan), mosquito screens, and a location close to the pier because everything is carried on foot.

BRL 1,650

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Hotel Pending

São Paulo base (Paulista / Consolação / Jardins)

Check-in Feb 10
Check-out Feb 12

Look for: AC, strong soundproofing, near Paulista Avenue for safe-ish logistics and easy metro access.

BRL 1,200

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Hotel Pending

Foz do Iguaçu base (Centro or Av. das Cataratas)

Check-in Feb 12
Check-out Feb 15

Look for: AC, breakfast, and either Centro for food options or Av. das Cataratas for quick park access.

BRL 1,200

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Ground / Water Transfers

Bus Pending

Rio → Paraty (Intercity bus)

Departs Feb 04
Arrives Feb 04

Use a reputable operator and buy a seat in advance for weekends. Keep valuables on your person, not in the overhead rack.

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Train Pending

Paraty → Conceição de Jacareí (bus/transfer)

Departs Feb 07
Arrives Feb 07

Short coastal transfer to the most direct crossing point for Ilha Grande.

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🚆
Train Pending

Conceição de Jacareí → Vila do Abraão (Ilha Grande fast boat)

Departs Feb 07
Arrives Feb 07

Fast boat is the time-saver. Expect splash and sun: pack a dry bag for phones.

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Train Pending

Vila do Abraão → Angra dos Reis (boat) → São Paulo (bus)

Departs Feb 10
Arrives Feb 10

This keeps the route linear (no backtracking to Rio). It’s a long day; plan snacks and an early night on arrival.

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Activities & Tickets (Skip-the-hassle anchors)

Activity Pending

Christ the Redeemer (Corcovado Train timed ticket)

Starts Feb 01
Ends Feb 01

Buy only from official channels. Timed entry reduces standing in heat and makes summer rain easier to dodge.

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Activity Pending

Sugarloaf Cable Car (Bondinho)

Starts Feb 02
Ends Feb 02

Go early for cooler air and fewer queues, or late for sunset. Avoid unofficial street sellers.

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Activity Pending

Paraty shared boat tour (islands & coves)

Starts Feb 06
Ends Feb 06

Pick a smaller boat if possible: less crowd, better vibe. Bring cash for a simple lunch stop.

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🎟️
Activity Pending

Parque Nacional do Iguaçu (Brazil side ticket)

Starts Feb 14
Ends Feb 14

Buy via official ticket site and beware lookalike domains. The main trail is short but soaked with spectacle.

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Activity Pending

Itaipu Panoramic Tour

Starts Feb 13
Ends Feb 13

Low-effort, high-scale engineering view. Great for a chill day and a break from walking.

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🎟️

Food

Rio de Janeiro — classic comfort, café culture, and kilo restaurants

Feijoada (traditional Saturday-style)

Feijoada (traditional Saturday-style)

Must Try

A slow-cooked black-bean stew with pork cuts, usually served with rice, farofa (toasted cassava flour), orange slices, and garlicky greens. Done well, it’s smoky, dense, and oddly elegant—heavy enough to demand a post-lunch siesta.

45-90 BRL

Prato Feito (PF) at a 'comida a quilo'

Prato Feito (PF) at a 'comida a quilo'

Best Value

Brazil’s everyday lunch logic: you build a plate (often rice, beans, salad, and a protein). It’s flexible, fast, and perfect for mixed diets: Traveler A can go chicken/beef/veg while Traveler B can add seafood if available—without committing to a fish-only place.

25-55 BRL

Coxinha (street snack)

Coxinha (street snack)

Snack

A teardrop-shaped croquette—shredded chicken inside, crisp shell outside. The best ones have a creamy, almost shredded-velvet filling and a crackly crust that shatters gently when hot.

8-18 BRL

Pão de queijo + espresso

Pão de queijo + espresso

Breakfast

Chewy cheese-bread puffs that smell like toasted dairy and comfort. Pair with a short espresso or a creamy 'pingado' (coffee with a splash of milk) and you’ve basically hacked Brazilian mornings.

10-25 BRL

Açaí (Rio-style bowl)

Açaí (Rio-style bowl)

Heat Hack

In Rio it’s often served thick and cold, blended with guaraná syrup, topped with banana and granola. It’s dessert disguised as health food, and in summer it feels like air-conditioning you can eat.

18-45 BRL

Paraty — caiçara coast, but keep it non-seafood-friendly

Galinhada (chicken and rice)

Galinhada (chicken and rice)

No-Seafood Winner

A one-pot comfort dish where chicken, rice, garlic, and herbs mingle into something more than the sum of parts. Look for versions with a little turmeric or annatto tint—golden, fragrant, and deeply satisfying after a boat day.

35-75 BRL

Tapioca crêpe (sweet or savory)

Tapioca crêpe (sweet or savory)

Fast + Flexible

Cassava-starch crêpes made to order on hot plates, filled with cheese, chicken, shredded beef, or banana and cinnamon. Naturally gluten-free, quick, and perfect for a light meal between swims.

15-35 BRL

Sorvete / gelato stop in the old town

Sorvete / gelato stop in the old town

Heat Hack

Paraty’s heat invites constant cold desserts. Go for tropical fruit flavors like maracujá (passionfruit) or graviola (soursop)—bright, tangy, and intensely aromatic.

10-25 BRL

Ilha Grande — simple beach-town eats

Prato do dia (daily plate)

Prato do dia (daily plate)

Reliable

Island restaurants often run on a 'today’s plate' rhythm: rice, beans, salad, and a rotating protein. Ask directly for 'sem peixe' (no fish) and you’ll usually get chicken, beef, or omelet options.

30-65 BRL

Fruit juices (sucos) and coconut water

Fruit juices (sucos) and coconut water

Hydration

Fresh juices—mango, pineapple with mint, cashew fruit—are practically hydration therapy. Coconut water ('agua de coco') is the island’s default electrolyte drink.

8-18 BRL

São Paulo — big-city food without the tourist trap

Mercado Municipal (food-focused strategy)

Mercado Municipal (food-focused strategy)

Iconic

Skip the souvenir energy and treat it like a tasting lab: fruit stalls, mortadella sandwiches (share one), and quick bites. The building’s stained glass and ironwork feel like a cathedral built for appetite.

25-70 BRL

Virado à paulista (traditional plate)

Virado à paulista (traditional plate)

Regional Classic

A deeply São Paulo dish: beans, rice, sautéed greens, a pork cut, egg, and banana—salty, sweet, and sturdy. It tastes like the state’s working history turned into lunch.

40-85 BRL

Padaria dinner (yes, really)

Padaria dinner (yes, really)

Local Life

São Paulo bakeries can be full-service mini-worlds: soups, sandwiches, grilled meats, and excellent desserts. Perfect for a calm, no-alcohol evening with lots of non-seafood options.

30-80 BRL

Foz do Iguaçu — practical meals between big nature

Churrasco (by-weight or rodízio, but choose calm places)

Churrasco (by-weight or rodízio, but choose calm places)

Energy Refill

Brazilian grilled meats done simply: salt, fire, patience. Choose restaurants that serve by weight ('a quilo') for control—Traveler A can avoid seafood entirely, Traveler B can sample more widely without committing to a fish house.

45-110 BRL

Sopa / caldo after the falls

Sopa / caldo after the falls

Rain Mode

After a spray-soaked day, a simple soup hits like a reset button. Look for 'caldo' options: creamy, warm, and perfect if weather turns stormy.

20-45 BRL

Transport

Airport & Arrival Transfers

City Transport (Safe, Low-Hassle)

Intercity Moves (Linear Route, No Backtracking)

Hands-Free Luggage Strategy

Ticketing & Fraud Avoidance

Essentials

Emergency & Help

Safety Zoning (No-Go, High-Alert, High-Hassle)

Common Scams & How to Defeat Them

Health: Water, Heat, and Street Food Rules

Money, Tipping, and Payments

Connectivity