Brazil doesn't have unique dangers. It has specific etiquette and specific patterns — and tourists who treat it like a generic travel destination run into the same 15 problems repeatedly. Here's what to actively not do in 2026.
Quick List
- 1. Don't flash your phone on Copacabana at night.
- 2. Don't buy drugs on the street.
- 3. Don't wander into favelas alone.
- 4. Don't take random street taxis at airports.
- 5. Don't drink straight tap water.
- 6. Don't leave beach valuables unattended.
- 7. Don't assume everyone speaks English.
- 8. Don't miss Carnaval hotel deadlines.
- 9. Don't skip yellow fever for the Amazon.
- 10. Don't wear flashy jewellery in Rio Centro at night.
- 11. Don't tip beyond 10%.
- 12. Don't cheek-kiss on a first SP business handshake.
- 13. Don't litter beaches (R$ 1,000 fine in Noronha).
- 14. Don't forget a Type N adapter.
- 15. Don't underestimate internal distances.
1. Don't Flash Your Phone on Copacabana at Night
The single most common tourist crime in 2026 is phone-snatching on Copacabana's Avenida Atlântica after dark. The pattern: tourist holds phone casually while walking, phone is snatched by a passing bike or moto, gone in 2 seconds. Solution: use your phone inside restaurants or with your back to a wall; keep it in a zipped pocket between uses; never hold it up for photos along the boardwalk at night.
2. Don't Buy Drugs on the Street
Drug-related busts are the fastest way to wreck a trip. Brazilian drug law is harsh and offers zero tolerance for foreign tourists — a small quantity purchase in Lapa can mean 24 hours in a police station and a deportation mark. Whatever you think you're buying, you're also buying attention from people with very different business models.
3. Don't Wander into Favelas Alone
Favelas are not war zones — but they are socially sovereign communities where entering as an unknown foreigner with a camera looks exactly like what nobody wants. Guided tours in Santa Marta, Rocinha or Vidigal: completely fine. Solo wander into Maré, Alemão or Cidade de Deus: a different universe of risk. See our favela tour safety guide.
4. Don't Take Random Street Taxis at Airports
The kerbside guy in a "Taxi - Friend Price" shirt at GIG is an unofficial taxi linked to overcharging and occasional express-kidnapping incidents. Use Uber or 99 from inside the terminal. Use the official kiosk taxi (Transcoopass/Cootramo) if you prefer a fixed-price human option. Never the kerbside offer.
5. Don't Drink Straight Tap Water
Brazilian tap water is treated but rooftop reservoirs and old pipes compromise it at the last stretch. Bottled (R$ 4–6 for 1.5L) or hotel-dispenser water is standard. Locals don't drink tap. Brushing teeth is fine.
6. Don't Leave Beach Valuables Unattended
Copacabana and Ipanema beach theft is patient and low-grade — bags left at a towel while you swim. Take only what you need: R$ 100 cash, sunscreen, waterproof phone pouch, hotel key. Leave passport + wallet at the hotel. Beach kiosks will watch a small bag for you if you buy drinks there.
7. Don't Assume English
English is spoken at international 4★+ hotels, major tour operators and tourist-facing restaurants. Outside those bubbles, it is not. Taxi drivers, pharmacy clerks, beach kiosks, small-town pousada hosts: Portuguese or nothing. Google Translate + basic phrases ("obrigado", "por favor", "quanto custa") cover most needs.
8. Don't Miss Carnaval Deadlines
Carnaval 2026 falls Feb 14–17. Decent Copacabana mid-range hotels sell out by April 2025. Last-minute bookings in Jan 2026 pay 4–5× rack rate. Same logic for Salvador Carnaval, Copacabana NYE. If you're considering any of these, book 10–12 months out.
9. Don't Skip Yellow Fever for the Amazon
Not required to enter Brazil, but strongly recommended for the Amazon, Pantanal, Iguaçu, Chapada dos Veadeiros. Must be taken 10+ days before travel. Skipping it is a preventable-risk call that most people regret only when they don't.
10. Don't Wear Flashy Jewellery
Chunky gold chains, expensive watches, designer bags with visible logos — bad in Rio Centro after dark, bad on public buses, bad on crowded metros, fine in Zona Sul daytime. Match the street — most Brazilians wear modest everyday jewellery and keep the big stuff for indoor events.
11. Don't Tip Beyond 10%
Brazilian restaurants print a 10% service charge on the bill — that is the tip. Adding more on top is a foreigner move, slightly awkward at normal establishments. In super-premium restaurants (D.O.M., Fasano), an extra R$ 20–30 cash to the specific waiter is fine but optional. Don't double-tip.
12. Don't Cheek-Kiss in SP Business Context
Personal: two cheek kisses (one in some regions) is standard when introduced socially. Rio Zona Sul social: yes. First meeting with a São Paulo business contact: no — a handshake is the default, the kiss comes later if you know each other. Reading the room: follow their lead.
13. Don't Litter Beaches
Fernando de Noronha imposes a R$ 1,000 fine for littering and enforces it. Other beaches don't fine but do not tolerate trash — Brazilians are actively watching. Pack out what you bring in, use the bins, don't leave cigarette butts in the sand. Small thing, serious signal.
14. Don't Forget a Type N Adapter
Brazilian plugs are unique — Type N (three round pins in a triangle). US, UK, EU plugs don't fit. Adapter costs $8–12 on Amazon, R$ 25–40 at any Brazilian pharmacy in-country. Voltage: 127V in Rio/São Paulo/South, 220V in Northeast/Brasília.
15. Don't Underestimate Internal Distances
Brazil is the size of the continental US. Rio to Manaus is the distance from New York to Denver. Rio to Salvador is New York to Miami. Day-tripping between regions is a common misplanning — you need domestic flights and multi-day blocks for any cross-country move. Bus travel is affordable but 24-hour slogs are standard between major cities.
💡 If you do only three things from this list: use Uber not street taxis at airports, keep your phone out of sight at night on Copacabana, and book Carnaval 10 months ahead. Those three alone prevent 70% of tourist regrets.
⚠️ One more: don't assume your US credit card has no FX fee. Many do. Before the trip, confirm or switch to Wise / Chase Sapphire / Schwab to save 3% on every charge.
People also ask
Is Rio more dangerous than São Paulo?+
Marginally — Rio's tourist-facing petty theft rate is higher, SP's broader street-crime baseline is higher. Both fine in tourist zones with normal precautions.
Should I carry my passport around in Brazil?+
No — leave the original in the hotel safe. Carry a paper photocopy plus a photo on your phone. Brazilian police accept this for ID checks.
Can I drink the caipirinhas at beach kiosks?+
Yes at established kiosks on Copacabana, Ipanema, Leblon — they use filtered-water ice. Random roadside carts: use judgement.
Brazil doesn't have unique dangers. It has specific etiquette and specific patterns — and tourists who treat it like a generic travel destination run into the same 15 problems repeatedly. Here's what to actively not do in 2026.
Quick List
- 1. Don't flash your phone on Copacabana at night.
- 2. Don't buy drugs on the street.
- 3. Don't wander into favelas alone.
- 4. Don't take random street taxis at airports.
- 5. Don't drink straight tap water.
- 6. Don't leave beach valuables unattended.
- 7. Don't assume everyone speaks English.
- 8. Don't miss Carnaval hotel deadlines.
- 9. Don't skip yellow fever for the Amazon.
- 10. Don't wear flashy jewellery in Rio Centro at night.
- 11. Don't tip beyond 10%.
- 12. Don't cheek-kiss on a first SP business handshake.
- 13. Don't litter beaches (R$ 1,000 fine in Noronha).
- 14. Don't forget a Type N adapter.
- 15. Don't underestimate internal distances.
1. Don't Flash Your Phone on Copacabana at Night
The single most common tourist crime in 2026 is phone-snatching on Copacabana's Avenida Atlântica after dark. The pattern: tourist holds phone casually while walking, phone is snatched by a passing bike or moto, gone in 2 seconds. Solution: use your phone inside restaurants or with your back to a wall; keep it in a zipped pocket between uses; never hold it up for photos along the boardwalk at night.
2. Don't Buy Drugs on the Street
Drug-related busts are the fastest way to wreck a trip. Brazilian drug law is harsh and offers zero tolerance for foreign tourists — a small quantity purchase in Lapa can mean 24 hours in a police station and a deportation mark. Whatever you think you're buying, you're also buying attention from people with very different business models.
3. Don't Wander into Favelas Alone
Favelas are not war zones — but they are socially sovereign communities where entering as an unknown foreigner with a camera looks exactly like what nobody wants. Guided tours in Santa Marta, Rocinha or Vidigal: completely fine. Solo wander into Maré, Alemão or Cidade de Deus: a different universe of risk. See our favela tour safety guide.
4. Don't Take Random Street Taxis at Airports
The kerbside guy in a "Taxi - Friend Price" shirt at GIG is an unofficial taxi linked to overcharging and occasional express-kidnapping incidents. Use Uber or 99 from inside the terminal. Use the official kiosk taxi (Transcoopass/Cootramo) if you prefer a fixed-price human option. Never the kerbside offer.
5. Don't Drink Straight Tap Water
Brazilian tap water is treated but rooftop reservoirs and old pipes compromise it at the last stretch. Bottled (R$ 4–6 for 1.5L) or hotel-dispenser water is standard. Locals don't drink tap. Brushing teeth is fine.
6. Don't Leave Beach Valuables Unattended
Copacabana and Ipanema beach theft is patient and low-grade — bags left at a towel while you swim. Take only what you need: R$ 100 cash, sunscreen, waterproof phone pouch, hotel key. Leave passport + wallet at the hotel. Beach kiosks will watch a small bag for you if you buy drinks there.
7. Don't Assume English
English is spoken at international 4★+ hotels, major tour operators and tourist-facing restaurants. Outside those bubbles, it is not. Taxi drivers, pharmacy clerks, beach kiosks, small-town pousada hosts: Portuguese or nothing. Google Translate + basic phrases ("obrigado", "por favor", "quanto custa") cover most needs.
8. Don't Miss Carnaval Deadlines
Carnaval 2026 falls Feb 14–17. Decent Copacabana mid-range hotels sell out by April 2025. Last-minute bookings in Jan 2026 pay 4–5× rack rate. Same logic for Salvador Carnaval, Copacabana NYE. If you're considering any of these, book 10–12 months out.
9. Don't Skip Yellow Fever for the Amazon
Not required to enter Brazil, but strongly recommended for the Amazon, Pantanal, Iguaçu, Chapada dos Veadeiros. Must be taken 10+ days before travel. Skipping it is a preventable-risk call that most people regret only when they don't.
10. Don't Wear Flashy Jewellery
Chunky gold chains, expensive watches, designer bags with visible logos — bad in Rio Centro after dark, bad on public buses, bad on crowded metros, fine in Zona Sul daytime. Match the street — most Brazilians wear modest everyday jewellery and keep the big stuff for indoor events.
11. Don't Tip Beyond 10%
Brazilian restaurants print a 10% service charge on the bill — that is the tip. Adding more on top is a foreigner move, slightly awkward at normal establishments. In super-premium restaurants (D.O.M., Fasano), an extra R$ 20–30 cash to the specific waiter is fine but optional. Don't double-tip.
12. Don't Cheek-Kiss in SP Business Context
Personal: two cheek kisses (one in some regions) is standard when introduced socially. Rio Zona Sul social: yes. First meeting with a São Paulo business contact: no — a handshake is the default, the kiss comes later if you know each other. Reading the room: follow their lead.
13. Don't Litter Beaches
Fernando de Noronha imposes a R$ 1,000 fine for littering and enforces it. Other beaches don't fine but do not tolerate trash — Brazilians are actively watching. Pack out what you bring in, use the bins, don't leave cigarette butts in the sand. Small thing, serious signal.
14. Don't Forget a Type N Adapter
Brazilian plugs are unique — Type N (three round pins in a triangle). US, UK, EU plugs don't fit. Adapter costs $8–12 on Amazon, R$ 25–40 at any Brazilian pharmacy in-country. Voltage: 127V in Rio/São Paulo/South, 220V in Northeast/Brasília.
15. Don't Underestimate Internal Distances
Brazil is the size of the continental US. Rio to Manaus is the distance from New York to Denver. Rio to Salvador is New York to Miami. Day-tripping between regions is a common misplanning — you need domestic flights and multi-day blocks for any cross-country move. Bus travel is affordable but 24-hour slogs are standard between major cities.
💡 If you do only three things from this list: use Uber not street taxis at airports, keep your phone out of sight at night on Copacabana, and book Carnaval 10 months ahead. Those three alone prevent 70% of tourist regrets.
⚠️ One more: don't assume your US credit card has no FX fee. Many do. Before the trip, confirm or switch to Wise / Chase Sapphire / Schwab to save 3% on every charge.
People also ask
Is Rio more dangerous than São Paulo?+
Marginally — Rio's tourist-facing petty theft rate is higher, SP's broader street-crime baseline is higher. Both fine in tourist zones with normal precautions.
Should I carry my passport around in Brazil?+
No — leave the original in the hotel safe. Carry a paper photocopy plus a photo on your phone. Brazilian police accept this for ID checks.
Can I drink the caipirinhas at beach kiosks?+
Yes at established kiosks on Copacabana, Ipanema, Leblon — they use filtered-water ice. Random roadside carts: use judgement.