Tipping culture in Brazil is quieter than in the US. Brazilians generally don't tip Uber drivers, don't tip taxis beyond rounding up, and pay the 10% service charge that's already on restaurant bills without adding more. If you are coming from a tipping-heavy country like the US, the shift is: be normal, not generous. Here's the full picture.
Short Answer
- Uber & 99: Not required. R$ 2–5 is generous if you choose to.
- Restaurants: 10% service charge on the bill — that's the tip. Don't double it.
- Taxis: Round up. No percentage expected.
- Hotel porters: R$ 5–10/bag at 4★+; nothing at mid-range.
- Tour guides: R$ 30–50/person for a good day tour.
- Cafés / takeaway: nothing, not even a tip jar culture.
🧮
Brazil Trip Cost Calculator
Planning a Brazil trip? The calculator handles Uber budgets, meals, tipping buffers and live USD→BRL conversion in one go. USD $1 ≈ R$ 5.00 today
Calculate now →Uber & 99 — The Real Norm
Uber has been in Brazil since 2014 and 99 (owned by DiDi) competes on the same streets. In both apps, passengers almost never tip. Drivers do not expect it, don't act offended when you don't, and rate you 5★ either way. If the driver went out of their way — helped load a suitcase, waited for you at the pharmacy, took a detour for an extra stop without complaint — R$ 2–5 cash at drop-off is a nice gesture.
- Standard ride, standard service: no tip. This is normal and fine.
- Helped with luggage at the airport: R$ 5.
- Drove you through heavy traffic, waited patiently, added stops: R$ 5–10.
- Long-distance intercity Uber: R$ 10–20 on a R$ 200+ fare is generous.
- Via the app after the ride: both Uber and 99 offer in-app tips from R$ 2 up. Drivers receive 100%.
Restaurants — The 10% Rule
Almost every sit-down restaurant in Brazil prints a 10% service charge (taxa de serviço, sometimes "gorjeta") on the bill. Legally it's optional — you can ask the waiter to remove it (tirar a gorjeta) — but virtually everyone pays it. This IS the tip. Adding more on top is not expected and not the local norm.
- Sit-down restaurant: pay the 10%; no extra.
- Exceptional service in a high-end place: extra R$ 10–20 cash to the specific waiter if you want.
- Buffet / self-service (kilo): no tip expected. A R$ 2–5 coin in the jar is nice.
- Cafés / bakeries / takeaway: no tip. No jar. This is not a tip culture.
- Bars / botecos: the 10% applies on the closing bill.
💡 Check the bill. If 10% serviço is already included and you pay by card, most machines will ask "Gorjeta?" anyway — you can hit "não" because it's already in the subtotal. Tipping twice is a common tourist mistake.
Hotels
| Service | Suggested tip | Notes |
|---|
| Bellhop / porter (luxury) | R$ 5–10 per bag | Only at 4★+ where bellhops exist |
| Housekeeping (luxury) | R$ 5–10/day | Leave on pillow last day |
| Concierge (big favour) | R$ 50–100 | For restaurant bookings, special access |
| Airport shuttle driver | Nothing or R$ 5 | If they loaded luggage |
| Mid-range pousada owner | Nothing | This is family-run hospitality, not transactional |
Tour Guides & Activities
- Group day tour (20 people): R$ 10–20 pp is generous.
- Small-group premium tour: R$ 30–50 pp.
- Private full-day guide: 10% of the tour cost, or R$ 100–150/day.
- Multi-day Amazon / Pantanal lodge guide: R$ 50–100/day.
- Favela tour guide: R$ 20–40 pp — much of this is redirected to community projects.
- Free walking tours: R$ 40–60 pp. These are "free" but tip-funded.
What Locals Actually Do
Brazilian passengers almost never tip Uber. In restaurants they pay the 10% serviço and nothing more. At hotels the porter tip is a Copacabana Palace / Fasano thing, not a standard pousada thing. Travellers who over-tip stand out — sometimes in ways that change how they're treated on future rides and reservations. Matching the local norm is the most comfortable move.
⚠️ Over-tipping at small neighbourhood places can be awkward for the owner — they may feel it is charity, especially in smaller cities outside Rio/SP. Stick to the 10% service charge and you're fine.
People also ask
Do Brazilians themselves tip Uber?+
Almost never. A small minority do on special occasions. The social norm is not tipping.
Is the 10% service charge in restaurants mandatory?+
Legally optional. Socially near-universal. Removing it is allowed but uncommon and may prompt a small conversation with the waiter.
Can I tip with a card in Brazil?+
Yes. Card machines ask "gorjeta?" at the end — you can enter any amount. Goes to the restaurant's pool, not a specific waiter.
Tipping culture in Brazil is quieter than in the US. Brazilians generally don't tip Uber drivers, don't tip taxis beyond rounding up, and pay the 10% service charge that's already on restaurant bills without adding more. If you are coming from a tipping-heavy country like the US, the shift is: be normal, not generous. Here's the full picture.
Short Answer
- Uber & 99: Not required. R$ 2–5 is generous if you choose to.
- Restaurants: 10% service charge on the bill — that's the tip. Don't double it.
- Taxis: Round up. No percentage expected.
- Hotel porters: R$ 5–10/bag at 4★+; nothing at mid-range.
- Tour guides: R$ 30–50/person for a good day tour.
- Cafés / takeaway: nothing, not even a tip jar culture.
🧮
Brazil Trip Cost Calculator
Planning a Brazil trip? The calculator handles Uber budgets, meals, tipping buffers and live USD→BRL conversion in one go. USD $1 ≈ R$ 5.00 today
Calculate now →Uber & 99 — The Real Norm
Uber has been in Brazil since 2014 and 99 (owned by DiDi) competes on the same streets. In both apps, passengers almost never tip. Drivers do not expect it, don't act offended when you don't, and rate you 5★ either way. If the driver went out of their way — helped load a suitcase, waited for you at the pharmacy, took a detour for an extra stop without complaint — R$ 2–5 cash at drop-off is a nice gesture.
- Standard ride, standard service: no tip. This is normal and fine.
- Helped with luggage at the airport: R$ 5.
- Drove you through heavy traffic, waited patiently, added stops: R$ 5–10.
- Long-distance intercity Uber: R$ 10–20 on a R$ 200+ fare is generous.
- Via the app after the ride: both Uber and 99 offer in-app tips from R$ 2 up. Drivers receive 100%.
Restaurants — The 10% Rule
Almost every sit-down restaurant in Brazil prints a 10% service charge (taxa de serviço, sometimes "gorjeta") on the bill. Legally it's optional — you can ask the waiter to remove it (tirar a gorjeta) — but virtually everyone pays it. This IS the tip. Adding more on top is not expected and not the local norm.
- Sit-down restaurant: pay the 10%; no extra.
- Exceptional service in a high-end place: extra R$ 10–20 cash to the specific waiter if you want.
- Buffet / self-service (kilo): no tip expected. A R$ 2–5 coin in the jar is nice.
- Cafés / bakeries / takeaway: no tip. No jar. This is not a tip culture.
- Bars / botecos: the 10% applies on the closing bill.
💡 Check the bill. If 10% serviço is already included and you pay by card, most machines will ask "Gorjeta?" anyway — you can hit "não" because it's already in the subtotal. Tipping twice is a common tourist mistake.
Hotels
| Service | Suggested tip | Notes |
|---|
| Bellhop / porter (luxury) | R$ 5–10 per bag | Only at 4★+ where bellhops exist |
| Housekeeping (luxury) | R$ 5–10/day | Leave on pillow last day |
| Concierge (big favour) | R$ 50–100 | For restaurant bookings, special access |
| Airport shuttle driver | Nothing or R$ 5 | If they loaded luggage |
| Mid-range pousada owner | Nothing | This is family-run hospitality, not transactional |
Tour Guides & Activities
- Group day tour (20 people): R$ 10–20 pp is generous.
- Small-group premium tour: R$ 30–50 pp.
- Private full-day guide: 10% of the tour cost, or R$ 100–150/day.
- Multi-day Amazon / Pantanal lodge guide: R$ 50–100/day.
- Favela tour guide: R$ 20–40 pp — much of this is redirected to community projects.
- Free walking tours: R$ 40–60 pp. These are "free" but tip-funded.
What Locals Actually Do
Brazilian passengers almost never tip Uber. In restaurants they pay the 10% serviço and nothing more. At hotels the porter tip is a Copacabana Palace / Fasano thing, not a standard pousada thing. Travellers who over-tip stand out — sometimes in ways that change how they're treated on future rides and reservations. Matching the local norm is the most comfortable move.
⚠️ Over-tipping at small neighbourhood places can be awkward for the owner — they may feel it is charity, especially in smaller cities outside Rio/SP. Stick to the 10% service charge and you're fine.
People also ask
Do Brazilians themselves tip Uber?+
Almost never. A small minority do on special occasions. The social norm is not tipping.
Is the 10% service charge in restaurants mandatory?+
Legally optional. Socially near-universal. Removing it is allowed but uncommon and may prompt a small conversation with the waiter.
Can I tip with a card in Brazil?+
Yes. Card machines ask "gorjeta?" at the end — you can enter any amount. Goes to the restaurant's pool, not a specific waiter.