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Brazil Travel Tips

The practical guide no one gives you at the airport. SIM cards, money exchange, apps, power adapters, tipping, tap water, and everything else that catches first-time visitors off guard in Brazil.

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Quick Facts

Brazilian Real (BRL, R$)

Currency

Type N — two round pins

Power adapter

127V or 220V (varies by city)

Voltage

Treated but not recommended to drink

Tap water

Most Brazil travel tips online are recycled from other recycled lists. This guide is different: it covers the decisions that actually determine how your trip goes, from the moment you land to the moment you leave. SIM card or eSIM. Wise or airport exchange. Which apps to download before you board. What "the 10% service charge" really means at a restaurant. The practical layer of Brazilian daily life that most visitors figure out the hard way.

SIM Card and Data in Brazil

Getting a Brazilian SIM card is the single most practical decision you can make in the arrivals hall. Mobile data gives you Uber, Google Maps, real-time translation, and WhatsApp. WhatsApp is the main channel Brazilians use for everything from restaurant bookings to hotel check-ins.

Two options: a physical SIM or an eSIM. Physical SIMs from Claro, TIM, or Vivo cost R$30 to R$80 for a prepaid plan with 15 to 30GB of data. You buy them at kiosks in the airport arrivals hall or at any shopping mall. They work in any unlocked phone.

eSIMs are more expensive but you can buy and activate them before you board. No queue, no kiosk, no waiting. They require an iPhone XS or newer, or an Android from 2019 onward, and your device must be unlocked. Airalo covers Brazil with reliable regional and country-specific plans.

Buy at arrivals, not before customs

The Claro and Vivo kiosks in the arrivals hall are reliable and staff speak enough English to help you pick a plan. A 30GB plan for R$60 will outlast most trips. Unlock your phone before leaving home, because Brazilian SIMs will not work in locked handsets.

Photo: SIM card kiosk at a major Brazilian airport arrivals hall — Claro or Vivo branded booth, staff member assisting a tourist, modern airport terminal background

SIM cards are sold at kiosks in the arrivals hall at major Brazilian airports. Claro and Vivo are the most reliable networks for tourist use.

Money, Cash and Exchange in Brazil

The Brazilian Real (R$, BRL) is the currency. Do not exchange money at the airport. Currency exchange desks at international airports charge spreads of 20 to 35% above the real interbank rate, and you will lose a significant amount on the very first transaction.

Three better options. First, Wise: a prepaid card that uses the real interbank rate, accepted at virtually every card terminal in Brazil, with low fees on ATM withdrawals. Second, a credit card without international fees or IOF surcharges (Revolut and Charles Schwab work well for international visitors). Third, ATM withdrawals from Banco do Brasil or Bradesco branches, which tend to have more reasonable fees than independent ATMs.

Cash is still useful. Small bars, street food stalls, markets, and some taxis are cash-only. Withdrawing R$300 to R$500 on arrival covers most situations for several days.

ATM withdrawal limits in Brazil

Brazilian ATMs cap withdrawals per transaction, often at R$300 to R$1,000 depending on the machine and time of day. Banco do Brasil ATMs at international airports tend to have higher single-transaction limits. If you need more, use multiple transactions or try a different machine.

Photo: Someone tapping a Wise card on a Brazilian payment terminal (maquininha), casual restaurant or café setting, real transaction happening

Brazil's payment infrastructure is modern and widespread. Contactless cards work at nearly all restaurants, shops, and supermarkets in major cities.

Tipping in Brazil

Tipping in Brazil is optional and low-pressure. Restaurants add a 10% service charge to the bill, labeled serviço. By law, you cannot be forced to pay it. Most Brazilians either pay it without comment or ask for it removed if the service was bad. There is no social pressure in either direction, which is genuinely different from the United States.

For private guides, R$50 to R$100 per person at the end of a half-day tour is generous and appreciated. Uber drivers do not expect tips. Hotel housekeeping is not a standard tipping situation in Brazil. Delivery apps fold the delivery fee into the price shown.

Street food vendors and padaria counters operate on fixed prices. No one expects anything extra. The exception is a sit-down lunch at a neighborhood restaurant where the waiter has been looking after your table for an hour: leaving the 10% is a natural acknowledgment.

The bill often arrives with the 10% already added

Check the total before paying. The serviço line is usually itemized separately, so you can see exactly what it is. If you want to remove it, say "pode tirar o serviço" (can you remove the service charge). No one will be offended. If you want to leave extra on top of the 10%, leave it in cash on the table rather than adding it to the card payment, since cash tips reach the waiter directly.

Is Tap Water Safe to Drink in Brazil?

Tap water in Brazil's major cities is treated, but most Brazilians do not drink it. The chlorine from the treatment process is noticeable, and most households use filter jugs or 20-liter galão bottles delivered to the door. The habit of drinking tap water simply does not exist here the way it does in parts of Europe or North America.

Stick to bottled water during your trip. In restaurants, ask for "água mineral sem gás" (still) or "com gás" (sparkling). Bottled water at supermarkets and padarias costs R$2 to R$4 for 500ml. Tap water for brushing teeth is fine everywhere. In smaller inland cities and rural areas, treatment quality varies more, so the same rule applies.

Use the galão, not 500ml bottles

Most hotels and Airbnbs stock a 5-liter or 20-liter galão jug for drinking water in the kitchen or room. Fill a reusable bottle from that before heading out each morning. A 5-liter jug costs R$5 to R$8 at a supermarket and lasts two people most of a day. Buying individual 500ml bottles adds up fast and generates far more plastic waste.

Power Adapters and Voltage in Brazil

Brazil uses Type N plugs: two round pins plus a smaller round grounding pin in the center. This is different from North American, UK, and most European plugs, so you will need an adapter unless your device has a detachable cable that accepts different heads.

Voltage varies by city. Sao Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, and Salvador use 127V. Brasilia, Fortaleza, Recife, and Manaus use 220V. If you are visiting multiple cities, pay attention to this. Most modern electronics (laptops, phone chargers, cameras) are dual-voltage and work on both. Check the label on your charger or adapter: if it reads "100-240V", you are fine.

Hair dryers and flat irons are often single-voltage. Plugging a 127V-only appliance into a 220V outlet will damage it immediately. Hotels in tourist areas usually provide adapters at the front desk.

Check voltage before you plug in

The voltage difference between Brazilian cities is a real risk. Salvador: 127V. Recife: 220V. Rio and Sao Paulo: 127V. A single-voltage device plugged into the wrong outlet will burn out instantly. A universal travel adapter with voltage protection handles both.

Apps You Actually Need for Brazil Travel

Four apps handle 90% of practical problems for tourists in Brazil. Download these before you board.

Uber

More reliable and safer than hailing a taxi on the street in any major Brazilian city. Fixed price before you confirm, no route disputes, no cash needed. Works in Salvador, Rio, Sao Paulo, and every other large city. The single most useful app for navigating Brazil as a tourist.

Google Translate with offline Portuguese

Download the Portuguese language pack before leaving Wi-Fi. English penetration outside of hotels, tour agencies, and upscale restaurants is low. The camera translation feature works well for menus, signs, and street notices. Download offline maps in Google Maps too, since data can drop in historic centers with thick stone walls.

WhatsApp

Every Brazilian uses WhatsApp. Restaurants take reservations on WhatsApp. Guides communicate on WhatsApp. Airbnb hosts message you on WhatsApp. Having a Brazilian number from your SIM card makes all of this work seamlessly.

Wise

Pay with the real interbank rate anywhere cards are accepted. Track your spending in your home currency. Set up before you travel at wise.com. The physical card arrives in a few days by mail.

Secondary apps worth having: 99 (Uber alternative active in some cities), iFood (food delivery), and the offline version of Google Maps downloaded for your specific destination.

Download Google Maps offline before you leave Wi-Fi

Data in Brazil is generally reliable but patchy in some beach areas, coastal roads, and historic neighborhoods with thick walls. Offline maps are the backup that always works. Download the map tiles for each city you plan to visit while you still have a strong connection.

Photo: Overhead view of a tourist's phone showing the Uber app with a pickup point in a recognizable Brazilian neighborhood — Ipanema, Pelourinho, or Santa Teresa visible in the background

Uber works reliably across Brazil's major cities. It's consistently safer and more transparent on pricing than hailing a taxi on the street.

R$30-80

Prepaid SIM card with 15-30GB data — enough for most trips

30%+

Typical spread on airport currency exchange — use Wise or ATMs instead

4

Apps that replace most tourist problems: Uber, Google Translate, WhatsApp, Wise

Safety Basics for Tourists in Brazil

Brazil's safety reputation is louder than the reality for most tourists. Violent crime targeting visitors is rare when you follow straightforward practices. The risks are real but manageable. Understanding them specifically is more useful than generic warnings.

Use Uber at night. Walking unfamiliar streets after dark in any Brazilian city is higher risk than in most European cities. Uber removes that variable entirely and costs very little.

Keep your phone in your pocket. Holding your phone visibly on a busy street, especially near markets and transit hubs, makes you a target for quick theft. Use it standing with your back to a wall or inside a cafe.

Know your neighborhood's hours. The Pelourinho in Salvador is safe during the day and lively until around 10pm on busier nights. At 2am it is a different place. Know where you are and when to leave.

Avoid nighttime ATM withdrawals. Use ATMs inside bank branches or shopping malls during business hours. Standalone ATMs at night are a higher-risk environment in most Brazilian cities.

Travel with a photo of your documents. Leave your original passport in the hotel safe. A photo of your passport and visa page on your phone is sufficient for most situations and impossible to physically steal.

The distraction theft pattern

The highest-risk scenario for tourists in Brazil is distraction theft: someone bumps into you, spills something on you, or asks for help, while an accomplice takes your phone or bag from behind. It is low-violence and highly effective in crowded tourist areas. Stay aware in markets, bus stations, and popular plazas.

For city-specific safety information, our complete Brazil safety guide covers which neighborhoods are tourist-friendly, which situations to avoid, and how local safety culture actually works.

Visiting Salvador or Rio?

Our local guides navigate both cities daily. Ask us anything you'd ask a well-traveled local friend, before you book and not after you arrive.

Contact a Guide

Getting Around Brazil

Uber is the default for tourists in Brazilian cities. Prices are set before you confirm the ride, there is no language negotiation, and you have a record of the route. It works in every major city: Salvador, Rio, Sao Paulo, Recife, Fortaleza, Manaus.

Metro exists in Sao Paulo (extensive and efficient), Rio de Janeiro (limited but connects the Zona Sul beaches to the city center), and Salvador (newer, smaller network). City buses work but the routes are genuinely confusing for visitors who do not know the neighborhood layout. For airport arrivals, a private transfer or Uber is the simplest first move.

For intercity travel, Brazil is too large to ignore domestic flights. Sao Paulo to Salvador is roughly 2 hours by air and 30 hours by bus. LATAM, Gol, and Azul cover the main routes, often cheaply if booked a few weeks out. Intercity buses are worth considering for shorter hops under 6 hours: the executive-class buses on major routes have reclining seats, air conditioning, and onboard bathrooms, and they leave from rodoviárias (bus terminals) that are usually accessible by Uber.

Our getting around Brazil guide covers Uber, metro, intercity buses, and airport transfers in full detail, including which airports to avoid layovers in.

Language and Communication in Brazil

English is spoken at hotels, tour agencies, and upscale restaurants. Outside those contexts, assume it is not. Brazilians are patient with tourists who do not speak the language, but the expectation that someone will translate for you does not hold up at a bus station, a street market, or a local padaria.

Brazilian Portuguese is distinct from European Portuguese. The accent is softer, many words are different, and the rhythm is slower and more open. Even visitors who speak decent European Portuguese often need a week to tune their ear. For everyone else, Google Translate with the camera function covers menus and signs well. WhatsApp voice messages sent to guides or small businesses, then played through a translation app, solve most real-time communication problems.

Six phrases carry you further than you think: bom dia (good morning), boa tarde (good afternoon), obrigado or obrigada (thank you, matching your gender), por favor (please), quanto custa (how much), and nao entendo (I don't understand). Brazilians visibly soften when a foreigner tries even a few words. It does not mean you have to get them right.

One phrase that changes how locals treat you

Open every interaction with the right greeting: "bom dia" before noon, "boa tarde" until dusk, "boa noite" after dark. Brazilians greet each other this way without exception. Walking into a shop and launching straight into a question is considered abrupt. Start with the greeting and you immediately read as someone who respects local social norms, not a tourist who expects the world to adapt to them.

Photo: Street vendor in a Brazilian market or feira gesturing and smiling while communicating with a tourist who is looking at their phone — warm, candid, real interaction

Brazilians are patient with tourists who don't speak Portuguese. A translation app and a friendly attitude go a long way.

Brazil-Specific Packing Tips

Standard packing lists miss a few Brazil-specific items that consistently catch visitors off guard. These are about function in a tropical climate, not comfort extras.

SPF 50+ sunscreen, in quantity

Tropical sun at low latitude is different from what most visitors are used to. Reapply every two hours during beach days and city tours. Sunscreen is available locally but more expensive than in the US or Europe.

Insect repellent

Essential for the Amazon, Pantanal, and any inland or coastal rural area. Recommended for the northeast coast during summer months. DEET-based repellents are most effective. Available locally.

Light, quick-dry clothing

High humidity means heavy fabrics stay wet and uncomfortable for hours. Pack light linen or quick-dry synthetic fabrics. Coastal Brazil is casual, and you can wear the same clothes from the beach to a restaurant without standing out.

A light jacket or long sleeves

Shopping malls, intercity buses, and restaurants in Brazil run their air conditioning cold, sometimes aggressively so. One light layer covers you for these situations without taking up much bag space.

A travel security pouch

A flat money belt or inside-the-waistband pouch for your backup card and a copy of your passport is practical in busy tourist areas, markets, and crowded public transit.

A universal travel adapter with voltage switching

If you are visiting multiple Brazilian cities with different voltages, a universal adapter with dual-voltage protection handles all scenarios without having to think about it.

Farmácias in Brazil are excellent

Brazilian pharmacies are well-stocked and accessible. Ibuprofen, antihistamines, Dramamine, and basic antibiotics are available over the counter without a prescription. If you forget something, you can almost certainly buy it locally at a fraction of what specialty travel stores charge.

Plan Your Brazil Trip