City Life
Key Facts
—The system. Rio’s BRT is a network of dedicated bus corridors, and its newest, Transbrasil, runs about twenty-six kilometres along Avenida Brasil.
—The new piece. In March, the city opened a metropolitan terminal at Irajá that links the neighbouring Baixada Fluminense to the corridor.
—The saving. The Transbrasil corridor is designed to cut travel times along the route by up to half.
—The hub. The Gentileza terminal ties the BRT to the light-rail VLT and municipal buses in the port district.
—The safety. The metro is generally the safest transit option; the new terminal added dozens of security cameras.
Getting around Rio has long been a test of patience, but the picture is improving. The Rio de Janeiro BRT network is expanding again, and for anyone living in the city, the daily commute is slowly getting faster.
For a foreign resident, understanding Rio’s transit is essential. The city runs a metro, a light-rail line, suburban trains and a large network of express bus corridors known as BRT, each covering different parts of a sprawling city.
The newest addition is a terminal, not a line. According to the city government, the Pedro Fernandes terminal opened in March at a key junction, linking the neighbouring Baixada Fluminense to the express network.
How the Rio de Janeiro BRT is changing
The centrepiece of the recent push is the Transbrasil corridor. Running about twenty-six kilometres along the busy Avenida Brasil, it is the fourth and newest of the city’s express bus routes, cutting through eighteen neighbourhoods.
The payoff is time. The corridor is designed to roughly halve journey times for the many commuters who use Avenida Brasil daily, replacing slow, stop-start bus trips with a fast, dedicated lane.
The new Irajá terminal extends that benefit outward. It plugs the Baixada Fluminense, the dense suburban belt where many workers live, into the corridor, so a commuter can ride in and connect toward the centre or the airport.
The connections are the point of the whole design. The Gentileza terminal, the city’s largest integrator, ties the BRT to the light-rail VLT and municipal buses near the main bus station in the port district.
What it means for getting around safely
Safety is the question every newcomer asks about Rio transit. The honest answer is that it varies by line and neighbourhood, with the metro generally rated safer than the suburban trains or certain bus corridors.
The city is investing in that gap. The new terminal added dozens of security cameras, and specialised policing programmes have been extended across major transit hubs to deter petty crime and reassure commuters.
For expats, the practical habits are simple. Keep phones pocketed in crowded terminals, use apps to track buses and avoid long waits at isolated stops, and lean on the metro for the calmest daily commute.
The fare integration is a quiet but real gain. A single integrated ticket now lets riders combine feeder buses, the express corridor and municipal lines on one payment, instead of paying separately at each leg of a journey.
The broader story is a city knitting its modes together. Between the metro, the light rail, the suburban trains and the four BRT corridors, Rio is finally building something closer to a single network rather than a set of disconnected services.
Where you live still shapes the experience most. The beachfront south-zone neighbourhoods favoured by expats lean on the metro and buses, while the new corridors matter most for anyone commuting from the north or the suburbs.
What is the Rio de Janeiro BRT?
It is a network of express bus corridors with dedicated lanes and station-style stops. The newest, Transbrasil, runs about twenty-six kilometres along Avenida Brasil and connects to the wider system at the Gentileza terminal.
What changed in 2026?
In March the city opened a new metropolitan terminal at Irajá that links the neighbouring Baixada Fluminense to the Transbrasil corridor. It added new express and local connections, plus a single integrated fare across several services.
Is Rio’s public transport safe for newcomers?
Safety varies by line and neighbourhood, with the metro generally the calmest option. Keep valuables out of sight in crowded terminals, use ride apps at night, and the everyday commute in central areas is manageable with normal city sense.
View original source — Rio Times ↗



