Rio de Janeiro · Nightlife
If You Only Go to One Place
Bar Bip Bip, Copacabana
If you only do one thing tonight, squeeze into this legendary 1968 hole-in-the-wall for its Sunday roda de samba. The Sunday samba starts at 7 pm at Rua Almirante Gonçalves 50, and the ritual is pure Rio: there are no waiters – you fetch your own beer from the fridge and it gets noted down, and you don’t applaud between songs, you simply respect the musicians. Musicians in a circle, locals singing every word, the crowd spilling onto the pavement – it is the single most authentic Sunday night in the city, and it is five minutes from most Copacabana hotels.
Tonight at a Glance
—Bar Bip Bip Rio’s most soulful Sunday – roda de samba from 7 pm, musicians and old-school locals in an 18 m² bar; arrive 6.30 pm for a seat
—Pedra do Sal Free open-air samba on the rock where the genre was born – the weekend samba runs Sundays from about 6 pm until around 3 am; young, mixed carioca crowd, tonight’s late option
—Cacique de Ramos The sacred pagode yard where Zeca Pagodinho started – roda every Sunday at 5 pm, Rua Uranos 1326; family-festival vibe, deep-local crowd
—Feira de São Cristóvão A covered slice of the Northeast with live forró on two stages – Sundays 10 am to 8 pm; couples dancing, cheap food and beer, perfect early tonight
—Tau Bar Club Copacabana’s LGBTQ+ bar-club hybrid that is actually open tonight – runs seven days a week with funk, pop and electronic; young, flirty, dance-floor crowd from 10 pm
It’s Sunday 5 July 2026, and Sunday in Rio belongs to the roda de samba: this afternoon and evening the real action is around beer-crate samba circles – Samba da Volta in Centro, Cacique de Ramos in Olaria, Pedra do Sal at sunset – before the night funnels into Bip Bip’s 7 pm roda in Copacabana. The big Lapa houses (Carioca da Gema, Rio Scenarium) rest tonight, so tonight’s circuit is samba early, forró at São Cristóvão, then Pedra do Sal or a queer dance floor in Copacabana after dark.
What’s On Tonight
Roda do Bip – the weekly Sunday samba circle — at Bar Bip Bip, Copacabana, 7 pm. The most spontaneous samba roda in Rio and a stage of music history; tiny, free, magical – tonight’s essential stop
Weekend samba and pagode on the birthplace rock — at Pedra do Sal, Saúde, From 6 pm, late. Sundays it runs from 6 pm until about 3 am, usually with DJs and pagode too – free, open-air and the only proper late dance tonight outside the clubs
Roda de samba at Cacique de Ramos — at Cacique de Ramos, Olaria, 5 pm. One of the consecrated cradles of carioca samba, the roda forms every Sunday at 5 pm under the tamarind tree – where legends were launched
Samba da Volta – first-Sunday street roda — at Rua da Constituição, Centro, 3 pm. Every Sunday edition starts at 3 pm on Rua da Constituição – a Sunday full of joy, beer and samba; it runs on the 1st and 3rd Sundays – and 5 July is the first
Sunday samba at one of Brazil’s oldest botecos — at Armazém Senado, Centro, 1 pm onwards. One of Brazil’s oldest bars hosts samba every weekend – Sundays at 1 pm; standing-room heritage boozer, perfect pre-roda lunch stop
Live forró, xote and baião at the Northeastern pavilion — at Feira de São Cristóvão, Until 8 pm. Sunday hours are 10 am to 8 pm and the João do Vale and Jackson do Pandeiro stages host forró, xote and baião – dance with locals, eat carne de sol, done by dinner
Sunday roda at Lapa’s beloved boteco — at Beco do Rato, Lapa, From midday, music late afternoon. Opens from midday on Sundays, doubling as lunch, with rodas de samba Tuesday to Sunday from 5 pm – Lapa’s honest samba fix on a quiet night
Queer Sunday session – DJs till late — at Tau Bar Club, Copacabana, From about 10 pm. Open Sundays 6 pm to 4 am – the reliable LGBTQ+ dance floor tonight while the big Saturday clubs sleep
The Circuit: When to Go Where
Afternoon 1-3 pm – Armazém Senado (samba from 1 pm) or Feira de São Cristóvão for lunch, forró and warm-up beers
Golden hour 5 pm – choose your roda: Cacique de Ramos in Olaria for the deep-local pilgrimage, or Samba da Volta in Centro (started 3 pm)
Sunset 6 pm – Pedra do Sal as the light goes orange over the port zone; caipirinha from a street vendor in hand
Prime time 7 pm – Bip Bip in Copacabana for the Sunday roda; arrive by 6.30 pm if you want one of the few chairs
After 10 pm – back to Pedra do Sal (it runs to about 3 am on Sundays) or Tau Bar Club for a queer-friendly dance floor
Tomorrow, Monday – Rio’s famous ‘useful-day’ samba: Samba do Trabalhador at Renascença Clube from 4 pm and the Pedra do Sal Monday roda, 7 pm to midnight
Scenes & Sounds
Samba — The city’s heartbeat – acoustic circles around a table, cavaquinho and tamborim, everyone singing Where: Pedra do Sal, Bip Bip, Beco do Rato, Carioca da Gema and Rio Scenarium in Lapa (Tue-Sat)
Pagode — Samba’s playful backyard cousin – partideiro call-and-response, beer crates, feijoada Sundays Where: Cacique de Ramos, Sundays 5 pm; quadras and quintais across the Zona Norte
Forró — Accordion-driven couple dancing from the Northeast – grab a partner, they will teach you Where: Feira de São Cristóvão’s two stages; forró rooms inside the Lapa houses on weekends
Electronic — Underground house, techno and pop-trash basements; Friday-Saturday territory Where: Fosfobox, Copacabana’s underground club since 2004; D-Edge Rio in the port zone, underground parties until morning
MPB and jazz — Seated, candle-lit, world-class Brazilian songbook and touring acts Where: Blue Note Rio on the Copacabana seafront; Circo Voador in Lapa for the big MPB and rock gigs
Funk and pop — Baile funk beats mostly live inside club nights and roving parties rather than fixed venues Where: Fosfobox and Lapa club nights – depending on the party you’ll hit pop, hip-hop, trap and funk
Pick Your Night
Solo and safe: Bip Bip – tiny, warm, zero pretension; sit, sip a cold can, follow the no-clapping rule and you’ll be adopted by the regulars within an hour
Meet locals: Cacique de Ramos tonight at 5 pm, or Samba do Trabalhador tomorrow – it feels like a neighbourhood party, and a smiling gringo attempting Portuguese is a novelty, not a mark
Date night: Tonight: sunset caipirinhas and samba at Pedra do Sal. Later this week: Rio Scenarium’s antique-filled casarão – seven rooms of live samba, gafieira and chorinho in a 19th-century mansion
Dance till sunrise: Tonight Pedra do Sal runs to ~3 am and Tau to 4 am; on Friday/Saturday it’s Fosfobox, open 11 pm to nearly 5 am
Meet other expats: Lapa’s street scene and Pedra do Sal draw the traveller crowd; Copacabana’s Bip Bip and the queer bars of Farme de Amoedo in Ipanema are easy English-friendly ice-breakers
Where to Go
Bar Bip Bip — Copacabana
An 18 m² bar founded in 1968 that became one of the greatest places to hear music in Rio; musicians, poets and samba pilgrims of every age
Tonight: Sunday roda de samba at 7 pm – tonight’s anchor
Best time: Sun 7 pm samba, Thu 9 pm samba, Tue 8 pm choro, Wed 8 pm bossa nova; arrive 6.30 pm – few seats, so come early to sit
Cost: No cover; you pay for cans of beer – you grab your own from the fridge and it’s noted down; bring cash, tip the musicians’ hat
Address: Rua Almirante Gonçalves, 50, Copacabana
Instagram: @rodadobip
Getting there: Metro Cantagalo or Cardeal Arcoverde, short walk; easy Uber/99 drop
Good to know: No bookings – stand on the pavement like everyone else; no clapping between songs
Pedra do Sal — Saúde (port zone / Little Africa)
The birthplace of samba and home of its most famous Monday roda; open-air, free, a young mixed crowd of cariocas, students and travellers on the stone steps
Tonight: Sunday session from about 6 pm to around 3 am, usually with DJs and pagode
Best time: Monday is the classic – the official roda, 7 pm to midnight, at Largo João da Baiana; weekends from 6 pm; go at sunset
Cost: Free – no ticket, no reserved seats; street vendors sell beer and caipirinhas (roughly R$10-15), cash or Pix
Address: Rua Argemiro Bulcão / Largo João da Baiana, Saúde
Instagram: @pedradosaloficial
Getting there: Metro to Cinelândia then VLT towards Praia Formosa, alight Parada dos Museus, or door-to-door Uber/99 (recommended after dark)
Good to know: No; dress for a street party, wear trainers – the stone steps are slippery
Beco do Rato — Lapa
A prize-winning samba house keeping authentic rodas alive on a discreet Lapa street; boho locals, samba purists, zero tourist-trap energy
Tonight: Open from midday Sunday (lunch too); rodas run Tuesday to Sunday from 5 pm – note Sunday winds down early evening
Best time: Thu-Sat from 6 pm for the full late-night roda; Sunday is the mellow daytime version
Cost: Modest couvert artístico when live music plays; boteco prices (beer ~R$10-15); cards accepted
Address: Rua Joaquim Silva, 11, Lapa
Instagram: @becodorato
Getting there: Metro Cinelândia + 10-min walk, or Uber/99 to the door
Good to know: No; first come, first served
Cacique de Ramos — Olaria (Zona Norte)
A Zona Norte reference founded in 1961 where Zeca Pagodinho and Arlindo Cruz began; a family-party climate mixing decades-long regulars and first-timers
Tonight: The roda happens every Sunday at 5 pm at Rua Uranos 1326
Best time: Sundays 5 pm; the third Sunday adds the traditional feijoada from 1 pm, free entry; arrive by 4.30 pm
Cost: Cheap – grill food and cold beer at neighbourhood prices; carry some cash
Address: Rua Uranos, 1326, Olaria
Getting there: Uber/99 both ways (20-30 min from Zona Sul); simplest and safest option at night
Good to know: No; casual dress, big smiles
Feira de São Cristóvão (Centro Luiz Gonzaga) — São Cristóvão
Nearly 700 stalls of Northeastern culture with forró, xote, baião, repente and more under one giant pavilion; multi-generational, dance-mad crowd
Tonight: Open Sunday 10 am to 8 pm with live forró on the main stages – go for the afternoon-into-evening session
Best time: Friday and Saturday it runs 10 am to 4 am; Sundays are the busiest and end at 8 pm; go by 4 pm
Cost: Entry about R$5 between Friday 6 pm and Sunday 8 pm; cheap food and beer; many boxes take cards, but carry some cash
Address: Campo de São Cristóvão, s/n, São Cristóvão
Website: www.feiradesaocristovao.org.br
Getting there: SuperVia train to São Cristóvão station by day, Uber/99 after dark
Good to know: No; totally casual
Carioca da Gema — Lapa
One of the most traditional samba dens in Rio, in a two-storey Lapa casarão; polished nightly line-ups, a smart mixed crowd of cariocas and visitors
Tonight: Closed tonight – Sundays and Mondays it’s shut; bank it for later this week
Best time: Tue-Wed doors 7.30 pm show 8.30 pm; Thu show 9 pm; Fri two shows 8.30 pm and 10 pm; Sat doors 8.30 pm show 10 pm; arrive at doors for a table
Cost: Ticketed entry (advance individual tickets around R$25, tables from R$60 for two) plus food and drink; cards fine
Address: Av. Mem de Sá, 79, Lapa
Phone: +55 21 98556-0834
Instagram: @barcariocadagema
WhatsApp: +55 21 98556-0834
Website: www.barcariocadagema.com.br
Getting there: Metro Cinelândia + 8-min walk or Uber/99 to the door
Good to know: Yes – buy ahead online or via WhatsApp on weekends; smart-casual
Rio Scenarium — Lapa / Rua do Lavradio
A 19th-century mansion turned Brazilian-music house with seven rooms, samba, gafieira, chorinho and pop – theatrical, antique-stuffed, great for a wow-factor night; dressier tourist-plus-carioca crowd
Tonight: Not tonight – the regular programme runs Wednesday to Saturday (Wed-Thu 7 pm-1 am, Fri 7 pm-2 am, plus a Saturday feijoada with live music from 1 pm)
Best time: Fri-Sat for full-house energy; arrive 8-9 pm to get a table before the dance floor fills
Cost: Entry roughly R$30-45 depending on the night; tickets via Sympla, the official sales platform; cards accepted
Address: Rua do Lavradio, 20, Centro/Lapa
Website: www.rioscenarium.com.br
Getting there: Metro Carioca or Cinelândia + short walk; Uber/99 late
Good to know: Yes on weekends – reserve a table but buy the ticket separately online; smart-casual
Circo Voador — Lapa
The open-sided concert tent under the Lapa arches – Rio’s best mid-size gig venue for MPB, rock and hip-hop; young, sweaty, sing-along crowd
Tonight: No confirmed show tonight – last night was the Arraiá do Circo with Geraldo Azevedo, 4 July, doors 8 pm; check the site for this week (2026 highlights include Nação Zumbi and FBC)
Best time: Gig nights Thu-Sat, doors usually 8 pm, headliner 10 pm-ish
Cost: Tickets typically R$40-120 by act; buy online; cards at the bar
Address: Rua dos Arcos, s/n, Lapa
Website: www.circovoador.com.br
Getting there: Metro Cinelândia + 5-min walk under the arches; Uber/99 after
Good to know: Buy tickets ahead – popular shows sell out; standing, casual
Fosfobox — Copacabana
Rio’s best underground club since 2004 – a basement of electronic, pop, hip-hop and rock nights with an alternative, LGBTQ+-friendly crowd; staff make clear no machismo, racism, homophobia or transphobia is tolerated
Tonight: Closed tonight – verified hours are Friday and Saturday, 11 pm to about 4.45 am; your Friday plan
Best time: Fri-Sat; doors 11 pm but the floor fills after 1 am – go late
Cost: Entry varies by party (~R$30-80); drinks pricier than botecos; cards including Visa and Amex accepted
Address: Rua Siqueira Campos, 143, loja 22a, Copacabana
Phone: +55 21 2548-7498
Website: fosfobox.com.br
Getting there: Metro Siqueira Campos is on the doorstep (before midnight); Uber/99 home
Good to know: Advance tickets for big parties; dress casual but stylish
Tau Bar Club — Copacabana
A modern bar-club hybrid – start with drinks, stay for the dance floor; young LGBTQ+ and friends, funk, pop, electronic and more
Tonight: Open tonight – Sundays roughly 6 pm to 4 am; the dance floor warms up after 11 pm
Best time: Runs seven days a week; weekends biggest, but Sunday is its quiet superpower
Cost: Modest entry on party nights; standard club drink prices; cards fine
Address: Av. Nossa Senhora de Copacabana, 1417, Copacabana
Getting there: Metro Cantagalo/General Osório before 11 pm; Uber/99 home
Good to know: No for regular nights; check their Instagram for event tickets
Neighbourhoods at a Glance
Lapa: The samba-and-street-party engine room under the arches – big houses, cheap caipirinha stalls, everyone from students to grandmothers (quieter on Sundays)
Saúde / Port zone (Little Africa): Historic, open-air and free – Pedra do Sal’s stone steps draw a young, mixed, alternative crowd; authentic samba with a slightly hipster edge
Copacabana: Beachfront classics and basements – Bip Bip’s samba shrine, Fosfobox’s underground, and a strong queer strip; touristy but always awake
Ipanema: Polished bars and the LGBTQ+ heart around Rua Farme de Amoedo, famous for its concentration of gay bars; flirty, international, pricier
Botafogo: The local hipster quarter – craft beer, indie bars and queer-friendly lounges with hardly a tourist in sight; first Sundays bring the Sambotica roda to Rua Farani
Zona Norte (Olaria, Andaraí, São Cristóvão): Where samba and forró live as community ritual, not show – go by rideshare, arrive humble, leave adopted
LGBTQ+ Tonight
Tau Bar Club — The dependable seven-days-a-week queer dance floor in Copacabana – Sundays about 6 pm to 4 am, young crowd, electronic and pop; tonight’s pick
Galeria Café — An Ipanema classic near Farme de Amoedo known for nights full of diversity and energy – a different party each night, from drag contests to Madonna-only nights; Rua Teixeira de Melo 31; best Fri-Sat
Pink Flamingo — Rio’s top gay/queer club, American-pub style with drag queens running the party – free entry bar vibe before 10 pm, then a party until dawn; it has moved premises recently, so confirm the current address on @pinkflamingorio before heading out
Money & How Paying Works
The comanda: at most bars and clubs you’re handed a paper or plastic tab card at the door; every drink is marked on it and you pay the lot at a caixa (till) before leaving. Guard it – losing the comanda usually means paying a hefty flat fine, often R$100+.
Couvert artístico: live-music venues add a per-person music cover (typically R$15-45) to your bill or charge ticketed entry – it’s the musicians’ pay, not a scam. At Rio Scenarium, for example, entry runs roughly R$30-45 depending on the night.
Cash vs card: cards and contactless work almost everywhere indoors, and locals pay by Pix; but street samba like Pedra do Sal runs on vendors, so carry some cash even where cards are accepted. Small notes (R$10/20) are your friend.
Tipping: a 10% serviço is usually added to the bill automatically – just pay it; no extra tip expected. If it’s not included, adding 10% is the polite norm. Round up for street vendors and drop something in the roda’s hat.
Getting Home Safe
Metro: lines 1, 2 and 4 run 5 am to midnight Monday-Saturday, but only 7 am to 11 pm on Sundays and holidays – so TONIGHT the last train is around 11 pm; after Bip Bip you can still catch it, after Pedra do Sal you can’t.
Use 99 or Uber, not street taxis: both apps are cheap, ubiquitous and let you share your route. Order from inside the venue or a bright, busy corner (Pedra do Sal: walk to the main road with the crowd), check the plate before getting in, and sit in the back.
Surge happens at closing time (midnight-3 am weekends): wait 15 minutes with a last beer rather than pay double, and never accept a ‘ride’ offered verbally on the street.
Rio at night rewards calm habits, not fear: keep your phone in a front pocket and use it sparingly on the street, carry one card and modest cash, leave the passport at home (photo on phone), and stick with the crowd – the busy block is the safe block.
Go out lighter than you think you need, drink water between caipirinhas, and door-to-door by rideshare after midnight; if a street feels empty, turn back to the noise – in Rio the party itself is the safest place to be.
Frequently Asked Questions
What actually happens on a Sunday night in Rio – isn’t everything closed?
The clubs mostly rest, but Sunday is samba’s holy day: rodas run all afternoon (Cacique de Ramos 5 pm, Samba da Volta 3 pm), Bip Bip’s roda starts at 7 pm and Pedra do Sal keeps going to around 3 am. Big houses like Carioca da Gema are closed Sunday and Monday – save them for midweek.
What time do Brazilians go out?
Late. Dinner at 9 pm, bars fill from 10 pm, clubs like Fosfobox open at 11 pm and peak at 2 am. The exception is samba rodas, which start in daylight (3-7 pm) – which is why Sunday suits jet-lagged newcomers perfectly.
Do I need to book, and do I need Portuguese?
Street rodas and botecos: just show up. Ticketed houses (Rio Scenarium, Carioca da Gema, Circo Voador shows): buy online ahead, especially Fri-Sat – Rio Scenarium sells officially via Sympla. English works in the Zona Sul; elsewhere a smile, ‘uma cerveja, por favor’ and pointing get you far – venues live on Instagram and WhatsApp, so DM them for tonight’s line-up.
View original source — Rio Times ↗



