Today is the cool one — 16°C to 22°C with a chance of a passing shower — so give the sand a miss and bank the culture.
The Brasileirão is on pause for the World Cup in North America, so the sporting week now funnels into the knockout rounds on bar screens across Ipanema and Copacabana.
On the business desk it is a data week: IBGE’s June inflation reading is the print expat professionals should watch before moving money.
In one line: Centro museums by day, Lapa samba by night, and keep the sunscreen for the weekend.
01
Weather & What to Wear
FOUR-DAY OUTLOOK
THU 9
16–22°C
shower risk
FRI 10
16–28°C
low — mist
SAT 11
18–28°C
low
SUN 12
18–30°C
low — cloud
Climatempo calls today at 16°C to 22°C with the possibility of rain — grey spells and a proper winter freshness by carioca standards. It has been a dry month so far: only about 4 mm has fallen in July, roughly 11% of the monthly average.
Wear actual layers — a T-shirt plus a light jacket you will want after dark, and shoes rather than Havaianas if you are walking Centro’s stone pavements in drizzle.
The bounce-back is quick: INMET has Friday at 16–28°C with morning mist then few clouds, Saturday at 18–28°C, and Sunday touching 30°C under more cloud — a genuine beach weekend.
Sunset today: 5:21 pm — July sunsets in Rio fall between 5:19 pm and 5:31 pm · The sea around Rio averages 22°C in July — bracing but swimmable; winter swell is common, so stay near lifeguard posts and respect red flags when they fly.
02
Day at a Glance
SNAPSHOT
— Weather: 16–22°C, shower risk — the coolest day of the week
— The day’s event: World Cup quarter-final week — Brasileirão paused, the bars take over
— Venue/time: CCBB, Rua Primeiro de Março 66, Centro — open 9 am–8 pm, free entry
— Markets: B3 trades 10 am–5 pm BRT; June IPCA inflation due Friday is the week’s number
— Weekend/outlook: sun returns Friday, up to 30°C by Sunday — plan the beach then
— The day for: museums, long coffees and live samba — not sand
A rare grey Thursday in the Cidade Maravilhosa — use it indoors and you will have earned Sunday’s 30°C.
03
What to See & Do
THURSDAY IN RIO
TODAY’S PICK — CENTRO CULTURE CRAWL
The free-museum day Rio does best
Start at the Centro Cultural Banco do Brasil (CCBB), Rua Primeiro de Março 66, Centro — open 9 am to 8 pm today (it closes Tuesdays, not Thursdays) and entry to the building and most shows is free, which makes it the best-value grey-day plan in the city.
Walk fifteen minutes north to Praça Mauá for the Museu do Amanhã, Centro’s futuristic science museum — Tuesday to Sunday, 10 am to 6 pm, with full entry at R$ 30 and half-price concessions; last entry is an hour before closing.
Break at Confeitaria Colombo, Rua Gonçalves Dias 32, Centro — the 1894 belle-époque café is a sight in itself, and a coffee with a pastel de nata will not ruin a budget the way its chandeliers suggest.
Getting there is easy: Metrô Line 1 or 2 to Uruguaiana or Carioca puts you two blocks from the CCBB, and the VLT light rail glides from Carioca to Praça Mauá if your legs give out.
If the sky clears by late afternoon, jump back on Line 1 to General Osório and catch the 5:21 pm sunset from Arpoador rock in Ipanema — the winter light there is the best of the year.
OUTDOORS — HEDGE YOUR BETS
If you must be outside, make it Parque Lage, Rua Jardim Botânico 414, Jardim Botânico — free entry, open from morning to 5 pm, with the palacete’s courtyard café (Plage Café) as your rain shelter and Christ the Redeemer looming overhead when the cloud lifts.
The forest paths cope fine with drizzle, but skip any Pedra da Gávea or Dois Irmãos trail ambitions today — wet granite is a genuinely bad idea, and the views are up in the cloud anyway.
Save the seafront ciclovia ride from Leme to Leblon for Friday or Saturday, when INMET promises few clouds and highs of 28°C.
COFFEE & WHERE TO WORK — BOTAFOGO & IPANEMA
The Slow Bakery, Rua São João Batista 108, Botafogo, is the nomad standby — serious sourdough, proper flat whites and reliable wifi through the working day; arrive before 9 am for a table with a socket.
In the Zona Sul, Cafeína on Rua Farme de Amoedo, Ipanema, does laptop-tolerant weekday mornings two blocks from the beach — good for a rain-day sprint between meetings.
For a full desk day, WeWork on Av. Almirante Barroso in Centro sells day passes and sits one block from Carioca station — pair it with the CCBB crawl above and you have the whole Thursday sorted.
THE CONTRASTING PLAY — SANTA TERESA SLOW DAY
If museums feel like homework, ride the historic bonde tram from Carioca station in Centro up into Santa Teresa — the rattling yellow tram over the Arcos da Lapa aqueduct is the journey, roughly R$ 20 for visitors, and the hilltop village mood suits a grey day perfectly.
Wander to Parque das Ruínas, Rua Murtinho Nobre 169, Santa Teresa — the ruined mansion-turned-arts-centre is free, and its terrace has the best harbour panorama in the city even under cloud.
Lunch at Bar do Mineiro, Rua Paschoal Carlos Magno 99, Santa Teresa, for Minas comfort food — the feijoada and a caipirinha are exactly what 17°C drizzle was invented for.
TONIGHT, AFTER 7 PM
Thursday is Lapa’s warm-up night, and the classic move is Carioca da Gema, Av. Mem de Sá 79, Lapa — live samba from around 8:30 pm nightly, with a cover charge in the R$ 40–60 range depending on the act.
Purists head instead to Beco do Rato, Rua Joaquim Silva 11, Lapa, where the roda de samba is played around a table rather than on a stage and the beer is botequim-priced.
If football is your religion, the World Cup knockout screens are on at Shenanigan’s Irish Pub, Rua Visconde de Pirajá 112A, Ipanema, and Mud Bug Sports Bar, Rua Rodolfo Dantas 16, Copacabana — both fill fast for big matches, so claim a stool by 6:30 pm.
Whatever you choose, take a ride app door-to-door after midnight in Lapa rather than wandering the quieter blocks behind the Arcos.
ALSO ON TODAY
World Cup quarter-final week — bars citywide — Shenanigan’s (Ipanema) and Mud Bug (Copacabana) — screens on from the afternoon, no cover, arrive early; the Brasileirão is paused so this is the football in town
CCBB — free exhibitions and cinema — Rua Primeiro de Março 66, Centro — today 9 am–8 pm, free entry; the most reliable rainy-day building in Rio
Museu do Amanhã — Praça Mauá, Centro — Tue–Sun 10 am–6 pm, R$ 30 (half concessions); pair with the VLT ride along the Porto Maravilha waterfront
Feira de São Cristóvão (Centro Luiz Gonzaga) — São Cristóvão — northeastern food, forró and repente, liveliest Friday and Saturday nights with a small cover of around R$ 10; go hungry
Feira Hippie de Ipanema — Praça General Osório, Ipanema — Sunday, roughly 9 am–6 pm, free to browse; the classic crafts market for gifts before anyone flies home
Pedra do Sal samba — Largo João da Baiana, Saúde, near Centro — Monday evening street samba, free; the birthplace-of-samba session every newcomer should do once
04
Getting Around
TRANSPORT
Metrô lines 1, 2 and 4 run normal weekday service today, roughly 5 am to midnight, with a single ride at R$ 7.90 — the turnstiles also take contactless bank cards, which is the easiest option for visitors; the VLT light rail stitches Centro together, linking Carioca, Praça Mauá and Santos Dumont airport.
If the forecast showers land on the 6–8 pm peak, expect ride-app surge pricing in the Zona Sul — beat it by taking Line 1 and walking the last blocks, and note that the seafront ciclovia’s painted surface turns slippery when wet, so ease off the Bike Itaú pace.
05
Where to Eat
LUNCH & DINNER
Lunch: In Centro, do the old-school thing at Confeitaria Colombo, Rua Gonçalves Dias 32 — mid-priced and worth it for the room alone. On a budget, Galeto Sat’s in Copacabana serves its famous charcoal chicken with farofa for the price of a couple of caipirinhas.
Dinner: For a treat, book Aprazível, Rua Aprazível 62, Santa Teresa — jungle-terrace Brazilian cooking at splurge prices, magical even on a cool night. Cheaper and rowdier, Braseiro da Gávea on Praça Santos Dumont, Gávea, does picanha and chopp with the after-work crowd.
06
Practical Info
GOOD TO KNOW
Carry a light rain layer and a proper jacket for tonight — the low heads to 16°C, which locals will treat as arctic and you will feel on an open-air bar stool.
Cards and Pix cover almost everything, but keep R$ 20–50 in small notes for feiras, the bonde and beach vendors; if the weekend forecast holds, book Cristo Redentor and Sugarloaf tickets online today, because Saturday’s few-clouds, 28°C forecast will pack both.
One plain safety note: in Lapa and Centro after dark, keep your phone pocketed on quiet side streets and take a ride app door-to-door rather than walking under the viaducts — standard big-city sense, nothing more.
07
Community & Lifestyle
FOR NEWCOMERS
Grey Thursdays are peak plug-in weather: InterNations Rio and the Meetup language-exchange circuit run regular weeknight encontros in Botafogo’s bar strip around Rua Nelson Mandela, and turning up alone is entirely normal — half the room did the same.
Online, the Rio de Janeiro Expats and Digital Nomads Rio Facebook groups are where flats, visa tips and tonight’s plans actually circulate; post that you are new and watch the coffee invitations arrive.
08
Game Day
WORLD CUP WEEK
With the Brasileirão and the Rio clubs — Flamengo, Fluminense, Vasco and Botafogo — on their mid-year World Cup pause, the only football story in town is the knockout rounds playing out across North America.
The tournament is at the sharp end: quarter-final week now, semi-finals pencilled for July 14 and 15, and the final on Sunday July 19 at MetLife Stadium outside New York — kickoffs land in Rio’s afternoon and evening, prime bar hours BRT.
Watch with a crowd: Shenanigan’s Irish Pub, Rua Visconde de Pirajá 112A, Ipanema, is the expat mothership, while Mud Bug, Rua Rodolfo Dantas 16, Copacabana, skews local-loud; for a botequim feel, Belmonte on Praia do Flamengo, Flamengo, puts the match on with pastéis and chopp.
For the biggest ties, tables go by 90 minutes before kickoff — book or arrive absurdly early, carioca-style.
09
Business & Markets
WEEK IN FIGURES
The B3 in São Paulo ran its usual 10 am–5 pm BRT session on Wednesday; with the market mid-week and data-light, the real action is in the calendar rather than the tape.
The number that matters is Friday morning’s IPCA inflation reading for June from IBGE — it feeds directly into the central bank’s next Selic decision, which is what keeps Brazilian fixed income on every expat professional’s radar.
If you are moving money this week, watch the real’s level against the dollar before transferring and use Pix-linked remittance rails rather than airport câmbio desks — the spread difference pays for a very good dinner in Leblon.
10
Plan Ahead
THE WEEK
THE DAYS AHEAD
Thu July 9 — Coolest day — 16–22°C with possible rain; Centro museums by day, Lapa samba by night, World Cup on the bar screens
Fri July 10 — 16–28°C, morning mist then few clouds — June IPCA inflation lands in the morning; beach or ciclovia afternoon
Sat July 11 — 18–28°C and few clouds — the beach day; book Cristo and Sugarloaf slots ahead
Sun July 12 — Up to 30°C under more cloud — Feira Hippie de Ipanema at Praça General Osório, then Arpoador sunset
Tue July 14 — World Cup semi-final week begins — reserve a table at Shenanigan’s or Mud Bug early; Pedra do Sal samba the night before if you missed it
Background: Rio de Janeiro Nightlife Tonight — July 8, 2026.
Background: Rio’s Great National Art Museum Is Coming Back to Life.
11
FAQ
QUICK ANSWERS
Is it really warm enough to swim in Rio in July?
Yes, with caveats: the sea averages about 22°C in July — refreshing rather than tropical — and air temperatures hit 28–30°C this weekend, so a midday dip on Saturday will feel great.
Winter brings bigger swell, so swim in front of a manned lifeguard post on Copacabana or Ipanema and stay out when red flags are up.
And do not skip sunscreen — winter UV in Rio still burns pale northern skin in under an hour.
How do I pay for things here — cash, card or Pix?
Foreign cards work almost everywhere, from botequins to beach kiosks, and the Metrô turnstiles take contactless bank cards directly — no ticket queue needed.
Pix is Brazil’s instant-payment system and the default for locals; without a Brazilian account you cannot send it, so keep a card plus R$ 20–50 in small notes for feiras, the Santa Teresa bonde and street vendors.
Withdraw from ATMs inside shopping centres or bank branches during daylight rather than street machines at night — better rates, fewer headaches.
What should I actually do today given the grey sky?
Commit to Centro: CCBB (free, 9 am–8 pm) plus the Museu do Amanhã (R$ 30) and a Confeitaria Colombo coffee make a full, cheap, dry day connected by Metrô Line 1 and the VLT.
Hold the beach and any big hike — Friday and Saturday bring few clouds and 28°C, and wet granite trails are not worth the risk today.
Finish in Lapa: live samba at Carioca da Gema from about 8:30 pm, or the free-spirited roda at Beco do Rato, then a ride app home.
View original source — Rio Times ↗


