A warm but changeable Sunday. At 23°C with a fair chance of a shower, the morning is the safer bet for the beach before any afternoon cloud rolls in.
Last call on a great show. The Yoshitaka Amano retrospective at the CCBB closes tomorrow, so today is your final relaxed chance to see it.
Brazil are sitting pretty. After Friday’s 3-0 win over Haiti, the side tops its group ahead of Wednesday’s decider against Scotland.
And the week ahead looks lovely. The clouds clear from tomorrow into a warm, dry run, so today’s unsettled spell is a brief one.
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01
Weather & What to Wear
FOUR-DAY OUTLOOK
SUN 21
23°C
35% rain
MON 22
25°C
0% rain
TUE 23
26°C
10% rain
WED 24
23°C
25% rain
It is a warm but changeable Sunday, cooler than the glorious Saturday just gone. The high reaches a pleasant 23°C, but with around a 35% chance of a shower, the day is less settled than it has been.
The morning looks the safer bet for the beach or a walk, with cloud and the chance of rain building later. Keep things light but pack a layer or a small umbrella if you are out for the day, just in case.
The good news is brief unsettledness gives way to a fine week. Monday is warm and bone dry at 25°C, and the warmth holds into Tuesday and beyond, so today’s clouds are a short-lived interruption.
02
Day at a Glance
SNAPSHOT
— Weather: 23°C, warm but changeable, 35% chance of rain
— Closing tomorrow: the Yoshitaka Amano show at the CCBB
— Football: Brazil top Group C after Friday’s 3-0 win over Haiti
— Next up: Scotland vs Brazil, Wednesday June 24, 7 pm BRT
— Open today: the Feira Hippie de Ipanema, Sundays only
— Markets: closed for the weekend; Selic now 14.25%
A warm, easy Sunday, with the week clearing nicely ahead.
03
What to See & Do
SUNDAY IN RIO
TODAY’S PICK — FEIRA HIPPIE DE IPANEMA
Rio’s classic Sunday market
A changeable Sunday is made for the Feira Hippie de Ipanema, the city’s beloved weekly craft and art fair that fills the Praça General Osório every Sunday of the year. It is a Rio institution, running since the 1960s, and a fine way to spend a few hours whether the sun holds or not.
The stalls are a treasure trove of handmade goods — leatherwork, jewellery, paintings, hammocks, woodcraft and homeware — alongside clothes and souvenirs that beat the tourist-shop standard. It is the place to find a genuine, locally made gift or a piece for the home, and the prices are reasonable, with a little friendly haggling part of the fun. Take cash, as not every stall takes cards, and give yourself time to wander the rows properly.
In one corner, the food stalls are a highlight in their own right, especially the famous tapioca and acarajé from the Bahian cooks in their white lace dresses — a perfect lunch on the hoof between browsing the rows. The fair runs roughly from 9 am to 6 pm, and it sits just a couple of blocks back from the beach, so it pairs neatly with a morning on the sand before any afternoon shower arrives. It is one of the easiest, most enjoyable ways to spend a Rio Sunday, rain or shine, and a far better source of a real keepsake than any souvenir shop along the seafront.
OUTDOORS — MORNING IS THE WINDOW
A Sunday by the sea, early
With showers possible later, the morning is the time to get outside. On Sundays the seafront road along Ipanema, Leblon and Copacabana closes to cars, handed over to walkers, runners, cyclists and skaters — one of the great Rio rituals, and a joy in the warm morning air.
It is the ideal way to enjoy the beachfront before any cloud builds, whether you stroll the promenade, hire a bike or simply claim an early spot on the sand. The Lagoa circuit, also car-light and green, is another fine option for a morning loop away from the traffic.
If the afternoon turns grey, no matter — the week ahead is warm and dry from tomorrow, with plenty of beach days to come. Today, take the bright morning while it is there, keep something indoors in reserve for later, and remember the seafront closure runs all day, so even a cloudy stroll along the car-free promenade is a fine way to feel the Sunday rhythm of the city.
COFFEE & A SLOW MORNING — IPANEMA & JARDIM BOTÂNICO
A lazy Sunday coffee
Sunday is for a slow coffee with no agenda, and a cloudy spell only makes a café corner more inviting. In Ipanema, Aussie Coffee in the passage off Rua Visconde de Pirajá is a relaxed spot for a flat white, handy if you are pairing it with the hippie fair nearby.
For a leafier setting, Empório Jardim over in Jardim Botânico is a pleasant stop near the gardens, ideal if a shower nudges you toward something gentle and green. Both suit an unhurried Sunday, when lingering over a good coffee is rather the point.
The coworking spaces are mostly closed on a Sunday, so this is a day for cafés rather than desks. If you do need to tap out a few emails, a corner table and a strong cup is all the office you need before the day drifts on.
THE CONTRASTING PLAY — CCBB, LAST CHANCE
Catch Amano before it closes
If a shower drives you indoors, there is no better refuge today than the CCBB, where the Yoshitaka Amano retrospective, Além da Fantasia, is in its very last days before closing tomorrow. A changeable Sunday afternoon is the perfect excuse to finally catch a show that has been one of the year’s most talked-about.
Amano’s dreamlike, intricate work spans fine art, illustration, fashion and the worlds of animation and gaming, much of it never shown in Brazil before. Entry is free, with limited tickets online and at the box office, though expect a closing-weekend crowd, so go early to be sure of a slot. The CCBB’s beautifully restored banking hall in Centro, with its grand glass-domed rotunda, is a splendid place to wait out the rain in any case, and there are usually other exhibitions on across its floors.
TONIGHT, AFTER 7 PM
An easy Sunday evening
Sunday nights in Rio are for winding down rather than going big, and a warm evening lends itself to something low-key. There is no Brazil match tonight, so the city takes a collective breath before the working week and the midweek football that follows.
For a gentle night out, the botequins of Botafogo and the beachfront kiosks are perfect for a relaxed drink and a bite as the day cools and the lights come on along the seafront. If you fancy a little music, some of the Lapa bars run a quieter Sunday session, a softer, more local version of the weekend’s full-throated swing, and a lovely way to ease out the weekend without a late night.
It is also a good evening to plan the week, with Brazil’s big group decider against Scotland coming on Wednesday. Keep things easy tonight, rest up, and save the real celebrating for the midweek match — Sunday in Rio is best enjoyed at a gentle, unhurried pace, the calm before the week picks up again.
ALSO ON TODAY
Feira Hippie de Ipanema — Praça General Osório, Sundays, ~9 am–6 pm, crafts and food.
CCBB — R. Primeiro de Março 66, free, 9 am–8 pm, the Amano show’s last full day tomorrow.
Seafront Sunday closure — Ipanema, Leblon and Copacabana roads car-free for walkers and cyclists.
Beaches — warm at 23°C; the morning is the safer bet before any afternoon shower.
Lagoa circuit — green and car-light, a fine morning loop away from the traffic.
Coming up: Scotland vs Brazil, Wednesday June 24, 7 pm BRT.
04
Getting Around
TRANSPORT
Sundays are the quietest day on the roads, and the seafront closures make the beachfront a pleasure to walk or cycle. The Metrô runs a Sunday timetable, a little less frequent than weekdays but still the easiest way to the beach or Centro.
For the hippie fair, the General Osório station in Ipanema is right by the Praça. For the CCBB, take the Metrô to Uruguaiana or Carioca, and note the VLT serves the port if you are combining museums downtown.
05
Where to Eat
LUNCH & DINNER
Lunch: Sunday lunch is a leisurely affair in Rio. The hippie fair’s tapioca and acarajé stalls make a fine lunch on the hoof, or settle into a long, traditional almoço at a neighbourhood restaurant — the unhurried Sunday meal is a local ritual worth adopting.
Dinner: Keep the evening simple. The botequins of Botafogo and the seafront kiosks suit a relaxed Sunday dinner of petiscos and a cold beer, the right note before the week begins again.
06
Practical Info
GOOD TO KNOW
A culture note worth acting on: the Amano show at the CCBB closes tomorrow, Monday, so today is the last relaxed chance to see it before the final-day rush. Entry is free, with limited tickets, and the CCBB is open until 8 pm.
A weather tip: with showers possible this afternoon, plan the beach or the seafront for the morning and keep an indoor option, like the fair’s covered areas or a museum, in your back pocket. A small umbrella is worth carrying if you are out for the day.
07
Community & Lifestyle
FOR NEWCOMERS
The Sunday hippie fair is one of the easiest ways for a newcomer to feel part of Rio life. It draws cariocas and visitors alike, and a slow wander through the stalls, chatting with the makers, is a gentle introduction to the city’s creative side.
A few tips: bring cash, browse before you buy as similar stalls cluster together, and do not be shy about a little polite haggling, which is expected. Pair it with the car-free seafront and a tapioca lunch and you have the quintessential, low-cost Rio Sunday.
08
Game Day
GROUP C WATCH
Brazil are in a good place. Friday’s 3-0 win over Haiti, with two from Matheus Cunha and one from Vinícius Júnior, lifted the side to the top of Group C and steadied the nerves after the opening draw with Morocco.
It now comes down to Wednesday. Brazil sit level on four points with Morocco but ahead on goal difference, with Scotland third on three, so the final round will settle who tops the group and who, if anyone, joins them in going through.
The decider is Scotland vs Brazil, with Morocco playing Haiti at the same time, both kicking off at 7 pm BRT on Wednesday. Brazil need only avoid defeat to be sure of progressing, but will want the win to seal top spot.
The other thing to watch is Neymar, who sat out the Haiti game as he recovers from a calf injury. There is hope he could return for Wednesday, which would be a welcome boost for the knockout rounds ahead.
09
Business & Markets
WEEK IN FIGURES
The markets are closed for the weekend, leaving a moment to take stock after a notable week. The big news was the central bank’s cut to the Selic, now at 14.25%, its third in a row, with no firm signal on what comes next.
The Ibovespa ended the week near flat, around 168,300 points, while the dollar firmed to about R$5.17 after the US Federal Reserve held its own rate but struck a more cautious, hawkish tone that weighed on emerging markets.
The week ahead should be quieter on the economic front, with no major domestic data due and the next central bank meeting not until late July. Trading resumes Monday, when the focus turns back to the global mood and the currency.
10
Plan Ahead
THE WEEK
THE DAYS AHEAD
Mon June 22 — warm and dry at 25°C; last day of the Amano show at the CCBB.
Tue June 23 — warm at 26°C; markets back in full swing.
Wed June 24 — Scotland vs Brazil, Miami, 7 pm BRT; the group decider.
Late July — the central bank’s next rate meeting, on July 28 and 29.
Group C now: Brazil 4 pts, Morocco 4, Scotland 3, Haiti 0.
11
FAQ
QUICK ANSWERS
What is the Feira Hippie de Ipanema and when is it on?
The Feira Hippie is Rio’s famous Sunday craft and art fair, held every Sunday in the Praça General Osório in Ipanema, roughly from 9 am to 6 pm. Running since the 1960s, it is a much-loved city institution.
You will find handmade leatherwork, jewellery, art, hammocks and homeware, plus clothes and souvenirs, and a corner of food stalls famous for Bahian tapioca and acarajé. Take cash, as not every stall takes cards, and the General Osório Metrô station is right beside the square, making it an easy stop before or after a morning on the nearby beach.
When does the CCBB Amano show close?
The Yoshitaka Amano retrospective, Além da Fantasia, closes tomorrow, Monday June 22, so today is the last relaxed chance to see it before the final-day crowds. The CCBB is open today from 9 am to 8 pm.
Entry is free, with limited tickets released online and at the box office, so arrive early on a closing weekend. The show spans Amano’s fine art, illustration and pop-culture work, much of it never shown in Brazil, and the CCBB’s restored hall in Centro is worth seeing in itself.
When do Brazil play next in the World Cup?
Brazil’s next match is the Group C decider against Scotland on Wednesday June 24, kicking off at 7 pm BRT, with Morocco playing Haiti at the same time. After Friday’s 3-0 win over Haiti, Brazil top the group on goal difference, level with Morocco on four points.
A draw or a win would secure Brazil’s progress, and a win would seal top spot in the group. Whether Neymar returns from his calf injury for the match remains to be seen, but there is hope he could feature.
What is the weather like this week?
Sunday is warm but changeable at 23°C, with around a 35% chance of a shower, so the morning is the safer bet for the beach. It is a step cooler and cloudier than the glorious Saturday just gone, though still a pleasant day overall.
From Monday the picture brightens considerably: warm and bone dry at 25°C, with the warmth holding into Tuesday at 26°C and beyond. So today’s unsettled spell is brief, and a fine, dry week follows that is ideal for the beach and being out and about across the city.
Rio de Janeiro Daily Brief, your Rio de Janeiro city guide for Sunday, June 21, 2026. All times in Brasília time (BRT, UTC–3). Weather: open-source API. Markets: B3 and Reuters. Sport: FIFA and CBF. Updated: 2026-06-21T07:30:00Z · Rafael Silva Santos.
Related: São Paulo Daily Brief for Sunday · Rio de Janeiro Daily Brief for Saturday
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