Rio de Janeiro · Culture
Key Facts
—When. The festival runs from May 21 to June 21, 2026, its 31st edition.
—How many. More than 80 restaurants take part across the city’s best-known neighbourhoods.
—The price. Fixed three-course menus run from R$59.90 ($11.90) at lunch to R$149.90 ($29.60) at dinner.
—The theme. This year’s menus, “The Champions’ Kitchen,” riff on World Cup-winning nations.
—New this year. A children’s menu, the Kids Week, is fixed at R$39.90 ($7.90).
—The scale. Organisers expect over 64,000 menus sold and about R$10 million ($1.98 million) added to the local economy.
Rio Restaurant Week runs through June 21, turning more than 80 of the city’s kitchens into a month-long, low-risk way for a visitor to eat well without overspending.
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There is a particular kind of food event you go to in order to eat, and another kind you go to in order to discover. Rio Restaurant Week belongs firmly to the second group.
For a visitor who does not know the city’s dining scene, it is a rare chance to try kitchens that might otherwise feel out of reach. The whole bet is removing the risk from a good meal.
How Rio Restaurant Week works
The format is simple. Each participating restaurant offers a complete three-course menu, a starter, a main and a dessert, at one fixed price.
Those prices fall into four tiers, from Traditional up to the top Diamond band. Lunch starts at around twelve dollars and the most exclusive dinners top out near thirty.
For anyone used to European or North American prices, that is remarkable value for a serious meal. The point is to make good dining feel approachable rather than special-occasion.
New this year is a fixed children’s menu, aimed at families who want the experience together. It is a small change that widens the festival’s appeal considerably.
A World Cup theme on the plate
The timing is deliberate. With the World Cup under way, this edition’s theme asks chefs to cook in tribute to nations that have lifted the trophy.
In practice that means a playful spread of international references. One Italian kitchen built a menu around an imagined Brazil-Italy final, while an Argentine grill leans into classic steakhouse fare.
Brazilian regional cooking gets its turn too, with Bahian and Amazonian dishes on several lists. The effect is a tour of world cuisine without leaving the city.
The festival also rewards a little planning. Tables in the higher tiers and at the best-known kitchens tend to fill first, especially at weekends, so the most sought-after seats can disappear in the opening days.
Where to look, and a famous name
The restaurants are spread across the neighbourhoods most visitors already know. Copacabana, Ipanema, Leblon, Botafogo, Barra da Tijuca and the Jardim Botânico district all feature.
Among the headline names is Cantina do Claude, the kitchen of Claude Troisgros, a French-born chef who became one of Brazil’s most celebrated culinary figures. His restaurant sits in the premium Diamond tier.
A word of practical advice runs through the local coverage. Each restaurant sets its own menu and its own days, so it pays to check the official site and book ahead for the better tables.
The festival has become a fixture of the city’s food calendar, and it is run by the same group that stages similar events across Brazil. Organisers describe it as the largest gastronomic festival in Latin America.
Part of the appeal for newcomers is the spread of styles on offer. A single week can take in French technique, Italian comfort food, Argentine grilling and Brazilian regional cooking, all at a price that is fixed in advance.
Why it matters beyond the table
The festival is more than a calendar fixture. Organisers expect to sell well over sixty thousand menus and to add roughly ten million reais, near two million dollars, to the city’s economy.
That makes it a real driver of restaurant trade in a quieter winter month. For owners, it is a chance to win new regulars rather than simply discount.
There is a charitable thread as well. Diners can add a small donation per menu to a cancer-support charity tied to Brazil’s national cancer institute.
For a traveller in Rio over the coming days, the takeaway is easy. The festival offers a relaxed, well-priced way to eat across the city, and the clock runs out on June 21.
Frequently Asked Questions
When is Rio Restaurant Week 2026?
It runs from May 21 to June 21, 2026, its 31st edition. More than 80 restaurants take part across the city.
How much does it cost?
Fixed three-course menus run from around twelve dollars at lunch to about thirty at dinner, across four price tiers. A new children’s menu is cheaper still.
What is the theme this year?
The 2026 theme is “The Champions’ Kitchen,” with chefs creating dishes inspired by World Cup-winning nations. The result is a spread of international and Brazilian regional cooking.
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