LatAm Expat & Nomad Daily Guide — Sunday, June 14, 2026
Good morning, and happy Sunday. Your LatAm expat nomad daily guide lands on a quiet-but-loaded day: a World Cup hangover in Brazil, the last big night of São João, and a week ahead that barely stops to breathe.
The hard news eases — Bolivia’s roads are reopening and Peru’s count is all but in — while the festas play their final encores before the calendar turns to a packed week.
Key Points
- Brazil drew their opener 1-1. Vinícius Jr spared the blushes against Morocco, and Ancelotti admitted the nerves.
- Bolivia’s blockades hit a 44-day low. Road cuts fell to about 68 and fuel is flowing again — but Cochabamba reinforced and queues persist.
- São João hits its final peak today. Floripa closes, and Rio’s São Cristóvão and Catete arraiás fill up.
- Medellín’s Tango Festival bows out tonight. A free closing concert plays Plaza Gardel from 4pm.
- The week ahead is stacked. Colombia debuts June 17, and two votes plus the CDMX deadline land June 21.
- Markets are weekend-shut. Today’s FX is Friday’s close, carried — re-check on Monday.
00Status Changes Since Saturday
| Story | Yesterday | Today | Next |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brazil at the World Cup | Opener kicks off tonight | Drew 1-1 with Morocco; Vinícius Jr equalised | Haiti Jun 19; Scotland Jun 24 |
| Bolivia blockades | Autopista reopened; five departments easing | ~68 road cuts — lowest of the 44-day conflict; 34M L fuel in | Cochabamba reinforcing; COB assembly Sunday |
| Peru runoff | Count complete; annulment bid dismissed | ~40 observed actas head to physical recount; audiences ongoing | Two Tambopata hearings Mon Jun 15; proclamation ~Jul 15 |
| São João | Peaks on St. Anthony’s | Second peak; Floripa closes, Rio’s São Cristóvão fills | St. John’s Jun 24 |
| Medellín Tango | Free street milongas | Free finale tonight at Plaza Gardel | 20th edition closes |
| CDMX rental registry | Deadline framed at June 21 | Deadline now a week out | Register before Jun 21 |
| Uruguay 12% tax | July start nears | ~2 weeks out; 8% withholding or 12% advances | Banks withhold from July |
01Visas & Residency
| Where | What changed | What it means for you |
|---|---|---|
| Peru | The count is complete and the annulment bids are dead and cannot be resubmitted; about 40 “observed” tally sheets head to a physical recount, with audiences run in several regions and two more in Tambopata on Monday. | Your residency is untouched; expect a slow, court-supervised finish, with the proclamation expected around July 15 and handover on July 28. |
| Bolivia | Blockades fell to roughly 68 road cuts, the fewest in the 44-day conflict, and 34 million litres of fuel reached La Paz and El Alto; but Cochabamba reinforced its cuts and the COB called a Sunday assembly. | If you are travelling overland, the read shifts from “don’t” to “check the corridor first” — expect intermittent cuts and fuel queues. |
| Mexico | Mexico City’s short-term-rental registry deadline is now a week away, on June 21 (calendar reading; June 30 if counted as business days). | If you host on a platform, register at the city portal this week rather than risk being barred at peak World Cup demand. |
| Uruguay | The 12% foreign-income tax starts collecting in July under Decree 95/026, via 8% bank withholding or 12% biannual advances; a 6% reduced rate or a multi-year holiday is electable for new residents. | If you are becoming a tax resident this year, lock in the holiday-or-tax decision before July, not after. |
| Colombia | The country votes in a presidential runoff on June 21; the nomad-visa bar holds near US$1,400 and the R-visa switch deadline is October 31. | Expect demonstrations around the vote; salaried remote workers qualify easily, and freelancers should diarise October 31. |
02Cost of Living & Money
Markets were shut for the weekend, so today’s rates are Friday’s close, carried unchanged. The Colombian peso was the week’s standout and the Uruguayan peso the lone faller — both worth re-checking when trading resumes Monday.
| Currency | Per US$ | Week move | Read |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brazilian real | 5.06 | −0.6% | the real firmed; your dollar buys a touch less |
| Mexican peso | 17.21 | −0.3% | steady through the protest cleanup |
| Colombian peso | 3,454 | −2.9% | the week’s big mover — firmest before the runoff |
| Chilean peso | 898.70 | −0.4% | a touch firmer |
| Peruvian sol | 3.40 | 0.0% | flat, unmoved by the count |
| Argentine peso | 1,429 | −0.3% | still firm — the cheap-dollar era stays over |
| Uruguayan peso | 40.54 | +1.3% | the outlier — peso weaker, the priciest city eases slightly |
And because Sunday is apartment-hunting time, here is the rent check across all 13 hubs — live from our city data, a furnished one-bedroom in the neighbourhoods expats actually pick.
| City | Furnished 1-BR | Comfortable month |
|---|---|---|
| Mexico City | US$800–1,500 (Roma Norte) | US$1,800–3,500 |
| Playa del Carmen | US$900–1,400 near the beach | US$1,700–3,600 |
| Mérida | US$500–800, bills often in | US$1,100–1,500 |
| Oaxaca | US$400–750 | US$1,600–2,400 |
| Medellín | US$500–1,200 (El Poblado) | US$1,200–1,800 |
| Bogotá | US$550–1,300 furnished | US$1,200–2,850 |
| Buenos Aires | US$800–1,300 (Palermo) | US$1,500–2,000 |
| São Paulo | US$950–1,900, condo fees in | US$1,800–2,500 |
| Rio de Janeiro | US$690–1,190 (Botafogo) | about US$2,000 |
| Florianópolis | US$700–1,400 | US$1,250–2,000 |
| Lima | US$600–900 (Barranco) | US$1,300–1,600 |
| Santiago | US$550–900 (Providencia) | US$1,200–2,000 |
| Montevideo | US$600–1,000 (Pocitos) | US$1,500–2,200 |
03What’s On
Today (Sunday). São João plays its final big set: São João Floripa closes its run at Arena Floripa with Léo Rocha, Juzé and Guilherme e Benuto, while São João de São Paulo wraps its weekend free at Parque Villa-Lobos.
In Rio, the Feira de São Cristóvão — “O Maior São João do Rio” — runs from early afternoon, and the free Arraiá do Catete fills the Museu da República with a forró aulão and the Multibloco.
Elsewhere. Medellín’s Tango Festival bows out with a free concert at Plaza Gardel from 4pm, and Buenos Aires marks 40 years since Borges with “Borges, ecos de un nombre” at the Recoleta, plus a free Indio Solari tribute in Almirante Brown.
04Art & Culture
The literary date of the weekend is in Buenos Aires, where “Borges, ecos de un nombre” at the Centro Cultural Recoleta marks 40 years since Jorge Luis Borges’s death today, June 14.
Across the river, Montevideo’s winter agenda rolls on, and most of the region’s culture this weekend — from Medellín’s tango to Rio’s arraiás — is free to enter.
05Food & Coffee
It is peak São João eating: canjica, pamonha, paçoca and grilled cheese on a stick, with warm quentão to fight the winter chill, from Floripa to the Feira de São Cristóvão.
Looking to the week, Buenos Aires lines up Calesita 2026 on June 18, the one-night chef crawl where kitchens across the city open their doors for a single evening.
06Community & Safety
Bolivia. The picture is improving — road cuts are at a 44-day low and fuel is flowing again — but Cochabamba reinforced its blockades and a national assembly meets Sunday. Check your route before any overland trip, and keep the tank topped up.
Brazil. A World Cup Sunday means busy bars and late metros in Rio and São Paulo, and the festas add to the crowds. Use ride apps after the forró winds down, and keep an eye on your belongings in packed arraiás.
Newcomer fact of the day. June is Brazil’s festa season, not just a date: arraiás run every weekend through São João on June 24, so if you miss one, another is only days away.
07What to Watch — June 14–24
Frequently Asked Questions
How did Brazil do in their World Cup opener?
They drew 1-1 with Morocco. Ismael Saibari put Morocco ahead before Vinícius Jr equalised; Brazil next play Haiti on June 19 and Scotland on June 24.
Is it safe to travel in Bolivia now?
It is improving — blockades are at a 44-day low and fuel is flowing — but Cochabamba reinforced its cuts, so check your corridor and expect intermittent closures and queues.
Is São João still on this weekend?
Yes — today is the final big day, with Floripa closing and Rio’s São Cristóvão and Catete arraiás in full swing. Festas continue to St. John’s on June 24.
When will Peru have a result?
The count is complete, but a handful of contested tally sheets go to a physical recount. The proclamation is expected around July 15, with handover on July 28.
What’s the big week ahead?
Colombia’s World Cup debut (June 17), Brazil v Haiti (June 19), Lima’s central concert (June 20), and Colombia’s runoff plus the Mexico City rental deadline (June 21).