LatAm Expat & Nomad Daily Guide — Sunday, June 21, 2026
Good morning. Your LatAm expat nomad daily guide lands on a Sunday of decisions — a Colombian presidential vote, a hardening crisis in Bolivia, and a World Cup night that could end Uruguay’s run.
The hard news sits in Bogotá’s polling stations and La Paz’s cleared highways; the football decides who survives the group stage.
Key Points
- Colombia votes today. The runoff pits De la Espriella against Cepeda, with polls open 8am to 4pm and a result due tonight.
- Bolivia’s state of emergency. Paz gave the army 90 days of powers to clear blockades after some 50 days of unrest.
- Uruguay must win. A loss to Cape Verde tonight could knock La Celeste out, with Group H all square on a point.
- The teachers’ strike is over. Oaxaca’s classes resume Monday as the CNTE winds down its 19-day action.
- São João peaks. Brazil’s winter festas build toward St. John’s Day on Wednesday.
- Weekend FX. Markets are shut, so Friday’s close stands: the dollar was mixed, firmest against the Argentine peso.
00Status Changes Since Saturday
| Story | Yesterday | Today | Next |
|---|---|---|---|
| Colombia runoff | US warning; dry law begins | Voting 8am–4pm; result tonight | Winner declared; market reaction Monday |
| Bolivia crisis | Paz–COB accord; some blocking | 90-day state of emergency; army clears roads | Congress vote within 72h; Chapare holdout |
| World Cup (LatAm) | Brazil won 3-0, top Group C | Uruguay must-win tonight; Paraguay won, Ecuador held | Argentina Mon; Brazil v Scotland Wed |
| CDMX teachers | Strike ends; Zócalo cleared | Centro normal; Oaxaca back to class Monday | Tripartite tables continue |
| Markets (FX) | Friday close | Weekend — markets shut; dollar mixed | Reopen Monday; watch the peso post-vote |
01Visas & Residency
| Where | What changed | What it means for you |
|---|---|---|
| Colombia | Colombians vote today for their next president, with a dry law running to Monday noon, closed land and river borders, and a phone ban inside polling stations. A result is expected this evening. | Foreign residents cannot vote, so plan errands around the dry law and avoid land crossings until Monday. |
| Bolivia | President Paz declared a 90-day state of emergency and ordered the military to reopen roads, with the decree allowing movement and gathering limits in declared conflict zones. | Fly rather than drive where Chapare and Cochabamba cuts persist, and check local rules before any intercity trip. |
| Mexico | The CNTE ended its 19-day strike and Oaxaca’s teachers return to class on Monday, while the 2026 INM fee increases remain in force. | Central Mexico City is back to normal, but budget more for residency paperwork this year. |
| Peru | The electoral court has rejected the mass-annulment bids, all but confirming Fujimori’s narrow win with the count near complete. | Your residency is unaffected; the proclamation is expected around mid-July, with handover on July 28. |
| Uruguay | The 12% tax on foreign income begins collection on July 1, with a tax holiday electable for new residents. | If you moved recently, speak to a Uruguayan accountant this month rather than after the date. |
02Cost of Living & Money
Markets are shut for the weekend, so these are Friday’s closing rates against the dollar. The greenback was mixed across the region — easing against the Colombian and Brazilian pesos while firming against the Argentine peso, the week’s biggest mover.
| Currency | Per US$ | Week move | Read |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brazilian real | 5.15 | −0.3% | the real firmed slightly |
| Mexican peso | 17.35 | +0.2% | a shade softer |
| Colombian peso | 3,436 | −0.7% | the firmest mover |
| Chilean peso | 903 | +0.2% | a touch softer |
| Peruvian sol | 3.38 | −0.1% | effectively flat |
| Argentine peso | 1,463 | +0.8% | the week’s weakest |
| Uruguayan peso | 39.97 | +0.3% | slightly softer |
And with the weekend free for apartment-hunting, here is the rent check across all 13 hubs — 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). Colombia votes through the afternoon, with a result due tonight, and Uruguay face Cape Verde at 6pm ET in their Group H decider. Across Brazil, the festas juninas reach their pre-St-John’s peak.
This weekend. São João parties fill Rio and São Paulo, from arraiás at the cultural centres to the Feira de São Cristóvão. Spain also meet Saudi Arabia earlier in the day.
Week ahead. Argentina can seal qualification against Austria on Monday, and Wednesday brings St. John’s Day alongside Brazil v Scotland and Czechia v Mexico.
04Art & Culture
The festas juninas dominate the cultural calendar this weekend, with Northeastern music and dance through their midweek peak. Rio’s arraiás run at the Museu do Pontal, CCBB and Praça XV.
Looking ahead, Bogotá Comic Con opens June 26 and Rio’s World Press Photo exhibition closes June 28. Medellín’s Dreaming Festival lands June 27.
05Food & Coffee
São João is at its height, and the food is the heart of it — canjica, pamonha, quentão and grilled corn at arraiás across Brazil. The season climbs to St. John’s Day on Wednesday.
For a single, low-cost stop, the free arraiás at Rio and São Paulo’s cultural centres pair the Northeastern table with forró. It is the cheapest, most cheerful way into the season.
06Community & Safety
Colombia. Today’s vote runs with a dry law to Monday noon, closed borders and a heavy security presence, so plan movement around it. Expect higher risk in the Pacific southwest, and note that foreign residents do not vote.
Bolivia. The state of emergency lets authorities impose curfews and movement limits in declared conflict zones, so verify conditions locally before travelling. La Paz and El Alto are easing but not yet normal.
Newcomer fact of the day. Many World Cup matches this year play in the US and Canada, not Latin America, so Uruguay’s decider tonight is in Miami. Always check the host city before planning a trip around a game.
07What to Watch — June 21–28
Frequently Asked Questions
Who is in Colombia’s runoff, and when is the result?
It is between the far-right Abelardo de la Espriella and the leftist Iván Cepeda. Polls run 8am to 4pm, and a result is expected on Sunday evening.
What does Bolivia’s state of emergency mean for travel?
It puts the army on the roads to clear blockades and allows curfews and movement limits in conflict zones. Fly rather than drive where Chapare-area cuts persist, and confirm conditions locally.
Does Uruguay’s match tonight matter?
Yes. With all four Group H teams on a single point, a loss to Cape Verde could push La Celeste toward elimination.
Is the Mexico City teachers’ strike really over?
The union ended its 19-day action and cleared the Zócalo, and Oaxaca’s classes resume Monday. Leaders call it a pause rather than a final closure, since the pension demand went unmet.
What are this weekend’s exchange rates?
Markets are closed, so Friday’s close stands: roughly 5.15 reais, 17.35 Mexican pesos and 3,436 Colombian pesos to the dollar. The dollar was firmest against the Argentine peso.