The weekend has arrived, and it is a beauty. Saturday is warm and largely dry at 24°C, with Sunday warmer still, so the beach and the outdoors are firmly back on.
Brazil’s knockout campaign begins on Monday. As Group C winners they face Japan in the round of 32 in Houston, kicking off at 2 pm BRT, a tougher tie than the favourites’ billing suggests.
The Bovespa ended the week flying. It rose on Friday past 173,000, capping a near-3% weekly gain as inflation worries eased, with the dollar holding around R$5.17.
A weekend for the sand, then. With clear skies and warm air, Ipanema, Leblon and the city’s great viewpoints are all calling.
01
Weather & What to Wear
FOUR-DAY OUTLOOK
SAT 27
24°C
15% rain
SUN 28
26°C
20% rain
MON 29
27°C
5% rain
TUE 30
25°C
5% rain
Saturday is the weekend the city has been waiting for. The high reaches a warm 24°C with only a slim 15% chance of a passing shower, making it a fine day to be out and about.
Dress light and easy: beachwear, a hat and sunscreen for the day, with perhaps a thin layer for the cooler sea breeze after dark. The damp of midweek is well and truly behind us now.
Sunday is warmer still at 26°C and Monday nudges 27°C, both bright and largely dry. In short, this is a glorious stretch of weather, with the beach, the Lagoa and the viewpoints all at their very best.
02
Day at a Glance
SNAPSHOT
— Weather: 24°C, warm and largely dry; a gorgeous beach weekend ahead
— Football: Brazil play Japan in the round of 32 on Monday, in Houston
— Kickoff: 2 pm BRT, which is 1 pm in New York; live on Globo and SporTV
— As group winners: Brazil top Group C; Morocco face the Netherlands
— Markets: Ibovespa closed Friday up 0.76% at 173,295, near a 3% week
— Weekend: warming to 26°C on Sunday under clear skies
A warm, bright Saturday, and the city’s weekend on the sand begins.
03
What to See & Do
SATURDAY IN RIO
TODAY’S PICK — THE SAND IS BACK
The beach day the whole week was building toward
After a grey, showery spell, Saturday delivers exactly what Rio does best — a warm, bright day made for the sand. The classic stretch from Ipanema to Leblon will be busy from mid-morning, with the kiosks humming, the volleyball nets going up and the water a real relief in the 24°C warmth, and the whole seafront alive with the easy energy of a Rio weekend.
Choose your patch to suit your mood. Posto 9 in Ipanema is the lively, see-and-be-seen heart of the beach, Leblon around Posto 12 is calmer and better for families, and the great curve of Copacabana has room for everyone along with the finest people-watching in the city.
If the main beaches feel too full, the little cove at Arpoador between the two is a lovely place to watch the surfers and, a little later, catch the famous Ipanema sunset.
Make a proper day of it and you will not go far wrong. Arrive before the midday sun is at its strongest, rent a chair and umbrella from one of the kiosks, and let the hours drift by with a chilled coconut or a cold chopp between dips in the warm sea.
As the light begins to soften in the late afternoon, a slow stroll along the seafront is the perfect way to round the day off. The easy weekend mood settles warmly over the whole of the Zona Sul, and there is nowhere in the city you would rather be.
OUTDOORS — BEACHES, BAY AND VIEWPOINTS
Clear skies open up the whole city
With the weather this good, the entire outdoors menu is open, not just the sand. The Lagoa Rodrigo de Freitas loop is ideal for a walk, a run or a cycle, and renting a pedal boat or a stand-up paddleboard makes for an easy, scenic morning ringed by the green hills.
For the big views, this is the weekend to go and take them. The Pão de Açúcar cable car repays a clear day with a sweep right across the bay, and Cristo Redentor on Corcovado is hard to beat when the sky is as bright as it is now, though both draw queues, so it pays to go early.
If you would rather earn the view on foot, the short, popular climb up Morro da Urca or the gentle trail to Pedra do Telégrafo rewards the effort handsomely. Keep half an eye on the surf and the lifeguard flags if you plan to swim, as the sea can run lively after an unsettled week, but the overall picture could hardly be more inviting.
COFFEE & WHERE TO WORK — IPANEMA & BOTAFOGO
A weekend coffee, and a quiet desk if you still need one
Saturday shifts the rhythm, but Rio’s specialty coffee scene is well set up for a slower weekend pace. In Ipanema, Aussie Coffee tucked off Rua Visconde de Pirajá pulls a serious flat white, while Empório Jardim near the Jardim Botânico is a lovely spot for a long, unhurried breakfast.
If you still have a little work to finish, a few good options stay open. Urban Bean in Botafogo keeps a calm room and a steady connection, and Curto Café in Centro is a reliable perch for an hour of focus with excellent coffee in hand.
For a proper desk, check the hours before you set off, as spaces such as Como Coworking in Botafogo and WeWork at Porto Maravilha often run reduced weekend times. On a Saturday this bright, though, the smart move is to wrap things up early and get yourself outside.
THE CONTRASTING PLAY — THE HEIGHTS OF SANTA TERESA
Swap the sand for the city’s bohemian hill
If a full beach day is not quite your thing, the cobbled hill of Santa Teresa offers Rio at its most atmospheric and unhurried. Ride up on the little yellow bonde, wander the steep lanes past artists’ studios and faded colonial mansions, and stop for a long lunch at one of the bars with a view back over the rooftops to the distant bay.
It pairs beautifully with the neighbouring Escadaria Selarón, the mosaic staircase that tumbles down toward Lapa in a riot of colour and ranks among the most photographed corners of the whole city. Round the afternoon off with a coffee or a caipirinha on a shaded terrace as the day cools, and you have yourself a gentler, greener counterpoint to the heat and the bustle of the seafront down below.
TONIGHT, AFTER 7 PM
Rio’s biggest night out
Saturday is the city’s grand night, and with the warm, dry weather holding firm, Rio will be out in force. The beachfront bars of Ipanema and Leblon fill early for a sundowner, and from there the evening can unfold in whatever direction the mood happens to take you.
For music and dancing, Lapa is the unmissable choice, its nineteenth-century arches floodlit while live samba and choro spill from the crowded bars out onto the streets. For a gentler pace, the botequins of Botafogo and the relaxed corners of Leblon are made for a long dinner and an easy drink in the warm night air.
Wherever you end up, the talk will drift between the weekend’s glorious weather and Monday’s knockout tie against Japan, now just two days away. Make a big night of it or keep things low-key — on a Saturday as fine as this, the only real rule is to enjoy a city in full and happy weekend swing.
Either way, you will not be short of company. The whole of Rio seems to spill outdoors on a warm Saturday night like this one.
ALSO ON TODAY
Beaches — Ipanema, Leblon and Copacabana at their best in warm 24°C sunshine.
Lapa — the floodlit arches, the bars and live samba in full Saturday-night swing.
Santa Teresa & Escadaria Selarón — the bohemian hill and its famous mosaic stairway.
Pão de Açúcar & Cristo — unbeatable city and bay views while the skies stay clear.
Lagoa — a scenic loop for a walk, a run, a cycle or a pedal boat on the water.
Monday: Brazil vs Japan, Houston, 2 pm BRT, in the round of 32.
04
Getting Around
TRANSPORT
A beach weekend puts the Zona Sul under pressure, so the Metrô is your friend for reaching Ipanema, Copacabana and Leblon without the hunt for a parking space. Trains run frequently on Saturdays, and the General Osório and Cantagalo stations leave you a short walk from the sand.
If you are driving, head out early or expect to circle, as the seafront fills fast on a day like this. For a night in Lapa, the Carioca and Cinelândia stations are handy, and booking a ride home in advance saves a long wait once the bars empty out.
05
Where to Eat
LUNCH & DINNER
Lunch: Saturday is feijoada day across Brazil, and Rio takes the tradition seriously. A long, lazy lunch over the rich black-bean stew at a classic Ipanema spot or a buzzy botequim is the proper way to spend the early afternoon, ideally with a caipirinha and a little live music alongside.
Dinner: For the evening, the city is spoilt for choice. Beachside seafood in the Zona Sul, petiscos and chope in Botafogo, or a proper sit-down dinner before a night in Lapa all suit a warm Saturday, so pick your neighbourhood and let the night build from there.
06
Practical Info
GOOD TO KNOW
On the football, Brazil’s next match is Japan in the round of 32 on Monday, played in Houston with kickoff at 2 pm BRT, so there is a full weekend to enjoy first. It is a clear step up in quality, with Japan a well-drilled side, so expect a tougher test than the group stage.
On the markets, the Bovespa ended the week strongly, climbing on Friday past 173,000 as inflation worries eased, with the dollar holding near R$5.17 and the Selic steady at 14.25%. For remote workers, expect a slower city this weekend, with many coworking spaces on shorter Saturday hours — all the more reason to enjoy the sunshine and save the desk for Monday.
07
Community & Lifestyle
FOR NEWCOMERS
A sunny Saturday on the beach is the easiest possible introduction to carioca life, and a warm welcome for any newcomer. Grab a chair at a kiosk, order a coconut or a chopp, and you will quickly fall into the relaxed, sociable rhythm that defines the city.
A few gentle tips: take only what you need down to the sand, keep an eye on your things while you swim, and follow the lifeguard flags in the water. Do that, and a weekend day by the sea is as fine a start to life in Rio as you could possibly wish for.
08
Game Day
THE ROAD AHEAD
The knockouts are set, and Brazil know their path. Having won Group C on seven points, unbeaten and conceding just once, they face Japan in the round of 32 on Monday in Houston, with kickoff at 2 pm BRT.
It promises to be a real test. Japan reached the last 32 as Group F runners-up without losing a game, holding the Netherlands to a draw along the way, and they are organised, technical and unlikely to be overawed by the favourites.
Brazil’s edge, as ever, is up front. Vinícius Júnior was among the standout attackers of the group stage, Matheus Cunha has looked sharp alongside him, and Neymar is back in the picture after returning from injury, giving Carlo Ancelotti options to trouble any defence.
For now, the players and the city get the weekend to breathe. The match is Monday, so there is time to enjoy the sunshine before the knockout nerves arrive for what should be an absorbing tie.
09
Business & Markets
WEEK IN FIGURES
The week ended on a high for the markets. The Ibovespa rose 0.76% on Friday to 173,295 points, capping a gain of almost 3% across the week as a brighter mood on inflation and a return of foreign buyers lifted the big banks.
The recovery clawed back most of June’s earlier losses, leaving the index up around 7.5% for the year so far. The dollar held near R$5.17 into the close, little changed on the week, after a choppy few sessions driven more by moves abroad than by anything at home.
The central bank has the Selic at 14.25% following this month’s cut, with its next decision due at the end of July. With inflation looking calmer, the tone heading into the weekend was decidedly upbeat.
10
Plan Ahead
THE WEEK
THE DAYS AHEAD
Sun June 28 — warmer still at 26°C and dry; the pick of the weekend for the beach.
Mon June 29 — Brazil vs Japan, Houston, 2 pm BRT, in the round of 32; warm at 27°C.
Tue June 30 — staying fine and warm at 25°C as the dry spell holds on.
Late July — the central bank’s next rate meeting, on July 28 and 29.
Group C done: Brazil through as winners, with Morocco to face the Netherlands.
11
FAQ
QUICK ANSWERS
Who do Brazil play next, and when?
Brazil face Japan in the round of 32 on Monday, June 29, at Houston Stadium, having qualified as winners of Group C. Kickoff is at 2 pm Brasília time, which is 1 pm in New York, with coverage expected on Globo and SporTV.
It is the first knockout game, a single match decided by extra time and penalties if the sides cannot be separated. Japan, the Group F runners-up, are well organised and unbeaten so far, so Brazil should expect a tougher test than their group stage might suggest.
Is the weather good enough for the beach this weekend?
Yes — it looks excellent. Saturday is warm and largely dry at 24°C, with only a slim chance of a passing shower, and Sunday is warmer still at 26°C under bright, clear skies.
Both days are ideal for the beach, the Lagoa and the big viewpoints, so the sand at Ipanema, Leblon and Copacabana should be busy and at its very best. The Pão de Açúcar cable car and Cristo Redentor reward the clear air with sweeping views right across the whole of the bay and the city below.
What is there to do in Rio on a Saturday night?
Saturday is Rio’s biggest night, and Lapa is its beating heart, where the floodlit arches, the bars and the clubs come alive with live samba and choro spilling out onto the streets. For a more relaxed evening, the beachfront bars of Ipanema and Leblon and the botequins of Botafogo serve drinks and petiscos in the warm night air.
Take the Metrô, which runs later at weekends, go in a group, and keep your valuables close in the busier crowds. With the weather this fine, the whole city will be out and enjoying it.
Why did the Bovespa rise on Friday?
The Ibovespa climbed 0.76% on Friday to close at 173,295 points, capping a weekly gain of almost 3%. The advance came from a brighter mood on inflation, easing interest-rate expectations, and a return of foreign money into Brazilian shares, with the big banks doing much of the lifting.
The recovery clawed back most of June’s earlier losses and left the index up around 7.5% for the year. The dollar held near R$5.17, while the benchmark Selic rate stays at 14.25% following this month’s cut to borrowing costs.
Related: São Paulo Daily Brief for Saturday · Rio de Janeiro Daily Brief for Friday
View original source — Rio Times ↗


