Rio de Janeiro · Nightlife
If You Only Go to One Place
Rio Scenarium
A 19th-century mansion in Lapa stuffed with antiques, three floors of live samba, gafieira and chorinho, and a door policy relaxed enough for a first-timer but a room that still feels properly carioca. It’s open latest tonight (2am) and is the single best ‘just go here’ answer for a Friday.
Tonight at a Glance
—Rio Scenarium Historic samba mansion in Lapa, mixed tourist-and-local crowd, best from 9pm, open till 2am Friday
—Circo Voador Tonight only: FBC with Djonga and MC Taya at 8pm — Rio’s biggest indoor stage for hip-hop and funk, young local crowd
—Pedra do Sal Free open-air samba roda from 6pm on the old slave-trade stones — the most authentic warm-up in the city
—Galeria Café Ipanema’s LGBTQ+ institution, Friday night is the Treta Festa pop-hits party, dance till sunrise
—D-Edge Rio Four-floor electronic music complex in the port district with a rooftop over Guanabara Bay, techno-chic crowd
Tonight the circuit runs from the free samba roda at Pedra do Sal through Lapa’s samba houses to Circo Voador, where FBC brings Djonga and MC Taya to the stage at 8pm — then the after-midnight crowd splits between Ipanema’s LGBTQ+ dancefloors and the port’s electronic clubs. Start early, because Rio’s real night doesn’t get going until 11pm.
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What’s On Tonight
FBC live, featuring Djonga and MC Taya — at Circo Voador, 8pm. The city’s top touring stage for hip-hop and funk, a huge young local crowd, and one of the only ‘big name’ shows on tonight specifically
Pedra do Sal roda de samba — at Pedra do Sal, Largo João da Baiana, 6pm. Free, outdoor, historic — the classic first stop of any carioca Friday
Friday samba roda across three floors — at Rio Scenarium, 7:30pm doors, main show from 9pm. Live samba, gafieira and chorinho in an antiques-filled mansion, the reliable Lapa anchor
Happy Hour with free live show, then the main samba set — at Carioca da Gema, 6:30pm happy hour, voice-and-guitar set 8–9:30pm. Cheaper caipirinhas before 8:30pm and a proper samba band after, right in the heart of Lapa
Leo Cavalcanti live — at Audio Rebel, Botafogo, 8pm. Intimate MPB/soul room for a calmer, more local night out
Felipe Cordeiro, with AQNO and Carla Costta — at Havana 59, Lapa, 9pm. A smaller Lapa stage if Scenarium and Circo Voador are too packed
Treta Festa — at Galeria Café, Ipanema, from around 11pm–midnight. Rio’s classic Friday LGBTQ+ pop party, mixed and welcoming crowd
The Circuit: When to Go Where
6pm warm-up: free samba at Pedra do Sal, cold beer on the stone steps
7:30–8:30pm: dinner and happy-hour samba at Carioca da Gema or a boteco in Lapa
9–11pm: pick your live show — Rio Scenarium for the classic experience, Circo Voador for tonight’s Djonga/FBC gig, or Audio Rebel for something calmer
Midnight onwards: Ipanema’s Galeria Café for LGBTQ+ dancing, or head to the Zona Portuária for D-Edge’s electronic floors
After 2am: the after-party crowd drifts to Vidigal’s hillside bars or stays put till sunrise at D-Edge
Quiet weeknight alternative: Trapiche Gamboa’s rustic samba roda or Pedra do Sal, which also runs Sat–Mon
Scenes & Sounds
Samba — Live roda de samba — acoustic, sung together, danced to — is the heartbeat of a carioca night Where: Lapa (Rio Scenarium, Carioca da Gema, Havana 59), Gamboa (Trapiche Gamboa), and free at Pedra do Sal
Funk — Rio’s own bass-heavy street sound, from baile funk MCs to hip-hop crossovers like tonight’s FBC/Djonga bill Where: Circo Voador, and favela bailes further out (go with a local or a tour, not alone)
MPB — Brazilian popular music, singer-songwriter sets, more seated and conversational than dance-focused Where: Audio Rebel, Teatro Rival Cinelândia, smaller Botafogo and Jardim Botânico rooms
Electronic — House, techno and tech-house with an international club-culture polish Where: D-Edge Rio in the port district; Saturdays bring the bigger international bookings
Forró — Accordion-led northeastern dance music, couples dancing close, warm and unpretentious Where: Trapiche Gamboa and Carioca da Gema run occasional forró nights
Pop/Drag — High-energy pop hits, drag shows and theme nights that define Rio’s LGBTQ+ scene Where: Galeria Café and Pink Flamingo
Pick Your Night
Date night: Explorer Bar in Santa Teresa for cocktails on a leafy terrace before or after dinner
Solo and safe: Rio Scenarium — busy, well-staffed, easy to strike up conversation at the bar
Dance till sunrise: D-Edge Rio’s multi-floor complex in the port district, or Galeria Café after midnight
Meet locals: Pedra do Sal’s free samba roda — completely mixed, no entry fee, everyone talks to everyone
Chill and conversation: A boteco table on Rua do Lavradio in Lapa before the live shows start
Where to Go
Rio Scenarium — Lapa
A 19th-century antiques-filled mansion turned live-music house across seven rooms; the classic first-timer’s Lapa night, loved by tourists and cariocas alike
Tonight: Friday’s regular multi-floor programme of samba, gafieira, chorinho and pop — doors from 7pm
Best time: Wed–Sat; arrive by 9pm for a table, later gets standing-room only
Cost: Entry roughly R$30–60 depending on time slot; drinks from around R$20; cash and card accepted
Address: Rua do Lavradio, 20, Centro (Lapa), Rio de Janeiro
Phone: +55 21 96550-0002
Instagram: @rioscenarium
Website: www.rioscenarium.com.br
Getting there: Uber/99 to Lapa, or metro to Cinelândia then a 10-minute walk
Good to know: Buy tickets online to skip the door queue; smart-casual, no real dress code
Carioca da Gema — Lapa
One of Lapa’s original samba bars, credited with kick-starting the neighbourhood’s revival, still one of the best rooms to hear a proper roda
Tonight: New Happy Hour 6:30–8:30pm with a free live set, Gabriel Versiani on voice and guitar 8–9:30pm, then the main Friday samba show
Best time: Fri–Sat; come for happy hour if you want the cheap caipirinhas, or after 9pm for the full show
Cost: Cover typically R$30–50 after 8:30pm; caipirinha promos around R$12–15 during happy hour; cash and card
Address: Av. Mem de Sá, 79, Centro (Lapa), Rio de Janeiro
Website: www.barcariocadagema.com.br
Getting there: Uber/99 or 10-minute walk from Cinelândia metro
Good to know: Walk-ins fine most nights; book a table for Friday/Saturday if you want to sit
Pedra do Sal — Saúde / Centro (Pequena África)
A historic quilombo site where samba was reborn — free, open-air, and completely unpretentious; the roda now runs Friday through Monday, not just the famous Monday session
Tonight: Free samba roda from around 6pm on the stone steps, drinks from surrounding barracas
Best time: Arrive by 7pm for a seat on the stones; gets packed by 9pm
Cost: Free entry; beer and caipirinha from bars around the square, roughly R$8–15, mostly cash
Address: Largo João da Baiana, Saúde, Rio de Janeiro
Instagram: @rodadesambadapedradosal
Getting there: Uber/99 to the port area; it’s a short walk from the VLT Sete de Setembro stop
Good to know: No booking, no dress code — flip-flops and a T-shirt are fine, watch your belongings
Trapiche Gamboa — Gamboa
A rustic 1867 warehouse-turned-bar near Pedra do Sal, known for keeping mic time open for women in its samba rodas and for a genuinely local, unhurried crowd
Tonight: Friday roda de samba, usually led by Eduardo Gallotti and Grupo Centelha; doors from 7:30pm
Best time: Thu–Sat, best after 9pm once the roda is in full swing
Cost: Couvert artístico around R$16–25; beer from about R$5; mostly cash, card accepted for tabs
Address: Rua Sacadura Cabral, 155, Gamboa, Rio de Janeiro
Getting there: Uber/99 recommended — it’s a walk from the nearest bus routes and there’s no metro station right there
Good to know: No booking needed, casual dress, all ages welcome
Circo Voador — Lapa
Rio’s landmark big-room live venue under the Arcos da Lapa, the go-to stage for national hip-hop, funk and rock acts
Tonight: FBC live, with Djonga and MC Taya, doors 8pm
Best time: Check the weekly line-up on Instagram; shows generally start 8–9pm
Cost: Tonight’s show from around R$70 (half-price ticket), general standing floor; card at the door, cash for extras
Getting there: Uber/99 or a short walk from Cinelândia metro
Good to know: Book online in advance — this show will sell out; casual dress, bag checks at the door
D-Edge Rio — Saúde (Zona Portuária)
The Rio outpost of São Paulo’s award-winning electronic club, a four-floor cultural complex with a rooftop over Guanabara Bay, house/techno curation and an international crowd
Tonight: No headline show confirmed for tonight — check their Instagram, but it’s a reliable Friday electronic-music standby with Saturdays pulling the bigger international names
Best time: Best from midnight, runs to sunrise; Saturdays are the flagship night
Cost: Entry varies by event, often R$60–150 with lotes (early tiers cheaper); load a card on arrival for drinks
Address: Av. Rodrigues Alves, 293, Saúde, Rio de Janeiro
Instagram: @dedgeclubrio
Getting there: Uber/99 only — no safe walking route at night, and parking is limited
Good to know: Buy tickets in advance via their lists; dress code leans all-black/techno-chic but is relaxed
Galeria Café — Ipanema
A 20-year LGBTQ+ institution right off Farme de Amoedo, drawing a genuinely diverse crowd — gay, lesbian, trans, and plenty of friendly straight allies
Tonight: Friday is Treta Festa night — pop hits, drag and dancing till sunrise
Best time: Fridays and Saturdays from 11pm–midnight onward
Cost: Entry roughly R$40–60; drinks reasonably priced for the area; card accepted
Address: Rua Teixeira de Melo, 31, Ipanema, Rio de Janeiro
Getting there: Uber/99, or a 10-minute walk from General Osório metro station
Good to know: No booking needed; dress to be seen but nothing formal required
Pink Flamingo — Copacabana
One of Copacabana’s best-loved LGBTQ+ bars, known for its drag shows, colourful decor and warm welcome to tourists and locals alike
Tonight: Reliable weekly drag-show standby — check their page for tonight’s exact line-up
Best time: Evenings from around 7pm, busiest after 10pm on Fridays and Saturdays
Cost: Usually no cover or a small one; drinks mid-range; card accepted
Address: Rua Raul Pompéia, 102, Copacabana, Rio de Janeiro
Getting there: Uber/99, or a short walk from Cantagalo or Siqueira Campos metro stations
Good to know: Walk-ins welcome, casual dress
Explorer Bar — Santa Teresa
A leafy hotel-terrace bar on Santa Teresa’s cobbled hill, strong on cocktails, calmer than the Lapa circuit below — good for a proper conversation or a date
Tonight: No live event, just its usual cocktail service — a reliable pre- or post-Lapa stop
Best time: Fridays 5pm–1am; go for sunset around 5:30–6:30pm
Cost: Cocktails roughly R$35–50; card accepted
Address: Rua Almirante Alexandrino, 399, Santa Teresa, Rio de Janeiro
Getting there: Uber/99 up the hill — the historic tram (bondinho) is a fun daytime option but don’t rely on it at night
Good to know: Walk-ins fine, smart-casual
Audio Rebel — Botafogo
A small, intimate room for MPB and soul, favoured by locals who want a proper seated show rather than a dancefloor
Tonight: Leo Cavalcanti live, 8pm
Best time: Check the weekly bill; shows usually run 8–11pm
Cost: Tonight around R$30 in advance; card and cash accepted
Address: Rua Visconde Silva, 55, Botafogo, Rio de Janeiro
Getting there: Uber/99 or a walk from Botafogo metro station
Good to know: Buy ahead for popular shows; casual dress
Neighbourhoods at a Glance
Lapa: The historic party district — samba houses, botecos and big live venues packed under the Arcos, loud and mixed tourist-local energy from 9pm
Zona Portuária (Saúde/Gamboa): The old African quarter turned nightlife frontier — Pedra do Sal’s free samba, Trapiche Gamboa’s rustic rodas, and D-Edge’s polished electronic club
Santa Teresa: Hillside, bohemian, arty — rooftop bars and hotel terraces for a slower, more romantic night
Ipanema/Leblon: Beachside and stylish — Farme de Amoedo is the LGBTQ+ heart, plus upscale bars and restaurants
Copacabana: Old-school and a bit gritty, with a strong LGBTQ+ scene along Rua Miguel Lemos and Rua Raul Pompéia
Botafogo: Residential and local, with a handful of good live-music rooms away from the tourist circuit
LGBTQ+ Tonight
Galeria Café — Ipanema’s classic dance club, Friday’s Treta Festa mixes pop hits and drag, genuinely mixed crowd from midnight
Pink Flamingo — Copacabana favourite for drag shows and a relaxed, colourful bar crowd from early evening
La Cueva — Copacabana’s oldest gay bar since 1964, an intimate cave-like room popular with an older crowd, heats up Friday and Saturday nights
Money & How Paying Works
The comanda: at most bars and clubs you’re handed a card or slip at the door — every drink and snack gets added to it, and you settle up on your way out. Guard it like your wallet; venues often threaten a steep fine for a lost card, though Brazilian consumer law actually says that fine is not enforceable — still, losing it is a hassle, so keep it safe.
The couvert artístico is a cover charge for the live band, usually R$15–35, separate from any drinks — it’s normal and goes straight to the musicians.
Cash still helps for small bars, street stalls and Pedra do Sal’s kiosks, but card (including contactless) is now accepted almost everywhere in the main venues.
Tipping is not mandatory but around 10% is the norm and often already added to your bill as ‘serviço’ — check before adding more.
Getting Home Safe
The metro runs Monday–Saturday from 5am to midnight, and 7am–11pm on Sundays and holidays — plan your last ride accordingly, especially after a late Lapa night.
Use 99 or Uber rather than hailing a street taxi; request your pickup from just inside a well-lit venue entrance, not out on the open street.
Expect a fare surge after 1–2am on Fridays and Saturdays, especially from Lapa and the port district — it’s normal, not a scam.
Keep your phone and cash low-key on the street, especially walking between Lapa venues or around Pedra do Sal late at night — stick to busy, well-lit stretches.
Pace your drinking and watch your glass in crowded samba houses and street parties; it’s a friendly scene, but treat it like any big city night out.
Frequently Asked Questions
What exactly is a comanda and what happens if I lose it?
It’s your running tab card — every order gets logged on it and you pay in full at the exit. If you lose it, staff may demand a fine; Brazilian consumer law says that’s not enforceable, but it’s still easier to just keep track of the card all night.
Is Lapa safe to walk around at night?
It’s busy and well-policed on weekend nights with huge foot traffic, but stay alert, keep valuables out of sight, and use Uber/99 for the final stretch home rather than walking far alone after 2am.
Do I need to book ahead or dress up?
For samba houses like Rio Scenarium or Carioca da Gema, smart-casual is fine and walk-ins usually work if you arrive by 9pm; for a specific touring show like tonight’s Circo Voador gig, buy tickets online in advance as it can sell out.
View original source — Rio Times ↗
