Home Travel Guide Brazil Nature & Wildlife Route — Amazon, Pantanal & Iguaçu
Travel Guide Updated March 2026

Brazil Nature & Wildlife Route — Amazon, Pantanal & Iguaçu

The ultimate wildlife itinerary: Amazon jungle, Pantanal wetlands and Iguaçu Falls — three of South America's greatest natural wonders in one trip.

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Why Brazil for Wildlife

Brazil is the most biodiverse country on Earth. It contains 10% of the world's species, the world's largest tropical rainforest, the world's largest tropical wetland and some of the most spectacular waterfall systems on the planet. This route connects three of the most wildlife-rich environments on the continent and can be done in 10–21 days depending on your pace.

Route Overview

Manaus / Amazon (4–6 nights) → fly → Cuiabá / Pantanal (4–5 nights) → fly → Foz do Iguaçu (2–3 nights) → fly home.

The Amazon (Manaus)

Manaus is the gateway to the Brazilian Amazon — a city of 2.2 million people surrounded by 5.5 million km² of rainforest. From Manaus, you have access to the Meeting of the Waters (where the black Rio Negro meets the sandy Amazon and they flow side by side for 6km without mixing), river boat tours, and jungle lodges.

What to book: A minimum 2-night jungle lodge stay is essential — don't just do day tours. The lodges take you to habitats inaccessible from Manaus. Best experiences: night caiman spotting (torch the riverbank — red eyes everywhere), pink river dolphin watching, piranha fishing, meeting riverine communities, guided canopy walks. Wildlife seen: sloths, monkeys (howler, squirrel, capuchin), toucans, macaws, giant river otters, anacondas.

💡 Dry season (Jun–Nov) is better for wildlife — animals concentrate around shrinking water sources. Wet season (Dec–May) floods the forest beautifully but makes trekking harder.

The Pantanal

The Pantanal is the world's largest tropical wetland — 150,000km² of flooded grasslands, rivers and forest in central-western Brazil. Unlike the Amazon where wildlife is hidden by dense canopy, the Pantanal's open landscape means you see far more animals per day than anywhere else in South America. This is the world's best place to see jaguars in the wild.

Base yourself at Cuiabá and take the Transpantaneira highway — 145km of elevated dirt road over 122 wooden bridges into the heart of the wetlands. Wildlife along the road: capybaras (hundreds), caimans (thousands), giant anteaters, marsh deer, hyacinth macaws, jabiru storks, and if you're very lucky, a jaguar on the riverbank.

Jaguar spotting: The Porto Jofre area at the end of the Transpantaneira is the world's best place to spot jaguars. Boat tours on the Cuiabá River in July–October (dry season, when jaguars come to the riverbanks) have a success rate of 90%+. Book with Pantanal Jaguar Camp or Araras Eco Lodge.

Iguaçu Falls

After the Pantanal, Iguaçu is the perfect finale — less about wildlife (though the falls have 400+ bird species including toucans and the extraordinary great dusky swift that nests behind the waterfalls) and more about sheer natural spectacle. The falls are 2.7km wide and consist of 275 individual waterfalls, with Devil's Throat dropping 82m in a permanent cloud of spray and rainbows.

Best Season for Wildlife

DestinationBest MonthsWhy
AmazonJun–NovDry season — wildlife concentrated near water
PantanalJul–OctPeak dry season — jaguar sightings at 90%+
Iguaçu FallsYear-roundFalls are most powerful Nov–Mar

What Animals You'll See

  • Amazon: Sloths, river dolphins, caimans, monkeys, anacondas, toucans, macaws, piranhas, giant river otters
  • Pantanal: Jaguars (with luck), capybaras, caimans, giant anteaters, tapirs, marsh deer, hyacinth macaws, jabiru storks, giant otters
  • Iguaçu: Toucans, coatis, butterflies, great dusky swifts, 400+ bird species

Practical Tips

  • Book jungle lodge and Pantanal lodge well in advance — good ones fill up months ahead
  • Yellow fever vaccination is essential for the Amazon and Pantanal
  • Bring binoculars — non-negotiable for the Pantanal
  • Long sleeves, DEET (40%+) and a head net are essential in the Amazon
  • Hire a local guide in both the Amazon and Pantanal — they spot wildlife that you would never see alone
  • Travel insurance with medical evacuation cover is essential for remote areas
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