Rio de Janeiro Daily Brief — Sunday, July 12, 2026
In Rio de Janeiro, Expect a classic carioca winter Sunday — sunny spells, a top of around 24°C and only a modest chance of a stray shower, so the beach is on.
The city’s real event today isn’t football but feet: the ASICS Golden Run returns to Rio for its 15th edition, drawing about 8,000 runners over 10km and half-marathon distances through the postcard stretch of the Zona Sul.
Markets shut the week on a high — the Ibovespa closed Friday up 2.97%, at 177,866.37 points, its best close since 14 May, while the dollar fell back into the R$5.10 range.
In one line: run-watch or beach in the morning, a free exhibition or two in the afternoon, and choro under the trees in Laranjeiras tonight.

01
Weather & What to Wear
FOUR-DAY OUTLOOK
Today, Sunday 12 July, brings a minimum of 20°C and a maximum of 24°C, with light winds and nothing that should spoil a beach morning or a run.
UV can reach a very high level of around 8 around midday this weekend, so factor in SPF 30+, a hat and shade between 10am and 4pm — evenings cool down enough for a light jacket.
The week turns: Monday stays warm and mostly dry with temperatures between 19°C and 27°C, but Tuesday brings a cold front with light rain and highs near 29°C before temperatures ease off again.
Sunset today: 5:22 pm · Winter sea temperatures around Copacabana typically sit between 21°C and 23°C — bracing but swimmable, with the usual calmer patches near the flagged posts and livelier corners for bodyboarders at the points.
02
Day at a Glance
SNAPSHOT
A gentle, sun-warmed Sunday built for the beach towel and the finish-line cheer.
Live Market IntelligenceBrazil — Live Market Board
Rio Times · Live Market Intelligence
Brazil — Live Market Board
+2.97%
177,866
+2.97%
66,496
+0.59%
11,057
+0.28%
3,280,224
+2.43%
2,307.67
+0.65%
56,194.27
+1.29%
| Instrument | Last | Change | YoY | Prev. | High | Low | Volume |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IBOV | 177,866 | +2.97% | +30.07% | 172,742 | 177,866 | 172,761 | — |
| USD/BRL | 5.11 | -0.17% | -8.50% | 5.12 | 5.13 | 5.10 | — |
| SELIC | 14.25% | — | — | — | — | — | |
| PETR4 | 39.65 | +1.12% | +22.98% | 39.21 | 39.97 | 39.34 | 27,213,400 |
| VALE3 | 74.18 | +1.41% | +34.19% | 73.15 | 74.66 | 73.12 | 22,118,800 |
| ITUB4 | 44.30 | +4.02% | +29.44% | 42.59 | 44.34 | 43.23 | 28,691,300 |
| BBDC4 | 18.86 | +4.78% | +16.85% | 18.00 | 18.87 | 18.32 | 47,714,200 |
| BBAS3 | 20.58 | +2.90% | -2.97% | 20.00 | 20.67 | 20.25 | 24,323,000 |
| B3SA3 | 15.42 | +4.26% | +9.44% | 14.79 | 15.53 | 15.19 | 41,437,800 |
| ABEV3 | 15.82 | +0.64% | +19.58% | 15.72 | 15.99 | 15.72 | 34,764,700 |
| WEGE3 | 46.51 | +1.68% | +16.57% | 45.74 | 46.80 | 46.11 | 7,145,200 |
| PRIO3 | 55.45 | -0.29% | +32.66% | 55.61 | 56.29 | 55.04 | 6,818,400 |
| SUZB3 | 41.55 | +1.27% | -16.65% | 41.03 | 41.87 | 41.20 | 8,080,900 |
| RENT3 | 41.10 | +4.31% | +7.45% | 39.40 | 41.32 | 40.31 | 8,338,600 |
| AZZA3 | 19.10 | +3.47% | -47.66% | 18.46 | 19.30 | 18.81 | 1,703,700 |
| CSNA3 | 5.18 | +7.92% | -37.82% | 4.80 | 5.20 | 4.95 | 14,591,200 |
| GGBR4 | 23.01 | +2.36% | +36.32% | 22.48 | 23.10 | 22.58 | 10,449,600 |
| ENEV3 | 27.55 | +5.15% | +107.61% | 26.20 | 27.55 | 26.61 | 16,185,800 |
03
What to See & Do
SUNDAY IN RIO DE JANEIRO
Cheer the Golden Run, then claim your patch of sand
Get up with the city: the 21km race starts at 6am on Avenida Delfim Moreira at Leblon’s Posto 12, with the 10km following at 6:45am from the Aterro do Flamengo near the Marina da Glória, both finishing together on the Aterro.
Walk or cycle down to the finish area for free — it’s the best free spectator sport in the city this weekend, with music and a recovery zone for runners.
By late morning head to Ipanema (Posto 9) or Leblon for a swim and a coconut water; winter water sits a cool but bearable 21-23°C, so bring a towel rather than a wetsuit.
Round off the afternoon at the Museu do Amanhã (Praça Mauá, 1, Centro; open Thursday to Tuesday, 10am to 6pm, last entry 5pm), where the new Síntese — Arte e Tecnologia na Coleção Itaú show runs to 31 August, tickets from R$20.
Note: because of the race, taxis and app-rides will be slower than usual across Leblon, Ipanema, Copacabana and Botafogo until early afternoon — walk or use the bike lane instead.
Sundays already close much of the beachfront to cars for cycling and running, so today’s race route simply intensifies the usual car-free morning feel along the Zona Sul shoreline.
The runners’ course loops through Avenida Vieira Souto, Avenida Atlântica, Avenida Princesa Isabel, the Enseada de Botafogo and the Aterro do Flamengo — walk or cycle any of these stretches once the race clears for an easy, traffic-light waterfront outing.
Bring water and sunscreen: with UV running high at midday, the shaded paths through the Aterro’s Parque do Flamengo are the more comfortable option after 11am.
Botafogo and Jardim Botânico stay the calmest weekend bases for remote work, away from the beachfront crowds and today’s race route.
Coworking chains such as WeWork’s Botafogo unit and Casa Nomad’s Rio locations typically keep weekend access for members, with dependable wifi if you need a proper desk rather than a café table.
If you just need a laptop and a flat white, Jardim Botânico’s café strip near the Instituto is a reliable, unhurried option on a Sunday morning before the neighbourhood fills up for lunch.
If sand and sunscreen aren’t your Sunday, swap the beach for the Centro’s museum row instead.
At CCBB (Rua Primeiro de Março, 66, Centro; open Wednesday to Monday, 9am to 8pm, closed Tuesdays), Vik Muniz’s A Olho Nu exhibition runs on the 1st floor until 7 September, and today is also the last day of the free 10th Festival Ecrã film season in the CCBB cinemas, 9 to 12 July.
Slower still: the free XXI RioHarpFestival keeps playing in the Rotunda and third-floor auditorium right through July — worth a wander-in if you’re already in Centro.
Skip the big clubs and head for Laranjeiras: the Roda de Choro Arruma o Coreto happens every Sunday at Praça São Salvador, free, under the trees, and about as carioca a Sunday evening as it gets.
For something with a view, the Aterro do Flamengo empties out after the race crowds go home, making an easy, breezy evening walk before dinner.
If you’d rather sit still, CCBB’s harp festival programming often runs into the evening in July — check the board at the Rotunda when you arrive, as slots vary by day.
Lapa’s usual samba houses stay open, but Sunday is quieter than the Friday-Saturday rush — good if you want the atmosphere without the crush.
ASICS Golden Run — Etapa Rio — Leblon (21km) and Aterro do Flamengo (10km) — from 6am, free to watch; road closures across the Zona Sul all morning
10º Festival Ecrã (closing today) — CCBB, Centro — free entry, last day of this year’s free film season
Síntese — Arte e Tecnologia na Coleção Itaú — Museu do Amanhã, Centro — daily 10am-6pm, tickets from R$20, runs to 31 August
Vik Muniz — A Olho Nu — CCBB, Centro — Wed-Mon 9am-8pm, runs to 7 September
Museu do Amanhã Sunday education programme — Espaço Educativo, Museu do Amanhã — 10:30am-12pm, free, subject to capacity
XXI RioHarpFestival — CCBB Rotunda and 3rd-floor auditorium — free, performances through July
04
Getting Around
TRANSPORT
The big disruption today is the race itself: CET-Rio’s special traffic operation closes stretches of Leblon, Ipanema, Copacabana, Botafogo and the Aterro do Flamengo through the morning, with around 180 agents and guards managing the bloqueios, so build in extra time for any taxi or app-ride south of Botafogo before midday.
Metrô Linhas 1, 2 and 4 and the VLT run their normal Sunday timetables with no reported disruption today — they’re your best bet for reaching Centro or hopping to Barra while the beachfront roads are shut.
05
Where to Eat
LUNCH & DINNER
Lunch: Santa Teresa’s Sunday feijoada tradition is strong at Bar do Mineiro and the more polished Aprazível — both are old carioca institutions worth the tram-and-hill trip, at proper sit-down, special-occasion prices rather than boteco rates.
Dinner: Stay local to tonight’s choro in Laranjeiras with a simple boteco plate nearby, or head to Botafogo’s restaurant strip for a wallet-friendlier, no-frills dinner before an early night.
06
Practical Info
GOOD TO KNOW
Carry some cash alongside your card and Pix for beach vendors and the Golden Run’s food stalls, since not every kiosk takes contactless payment.
Book any Sunday restaurant table ahead if you’re set on Santa Teresa, as the tram and narrow streets get busy once the World Cup break keeps more families in town for the school holidays.
Safety, plainly: stick to the lit, populated stretch of the Aterro do Flamengo and the beachfront bike path while the race crowds are around this morning, and avoid quiet, empty sections of the Aterro after dark tonight.
07
Community & Lifestyle
FOR NEWCOMERS
Rio’s expat and nomad running crews use races like today’s Golden Run as an informal meet-up — if you’re new in town, following local run clubs on Instagram is the easiest way into that circle before the next city race.
For newcomers settling in more generally, InterNations Rio and the various Facebook groups for foreigners in the city remain the standard first stop, especially with the World Cup break bringing extra visitors into the same bars and beaches this month.
08
Game Day
THE INTERVAL — WORLD CUP BREAK
There’s no Flamengo, Fluminense, Vasco or Botafogo today: the Brasileirão paused between June and July for the World Cup, so the city’s sporting energy today belongs entirely to the Golden Run’s 8,000 entrants rather than a Maracanã clássico.
The next big football date for cariocas is the World Cup itself: the semi-finals fall on 14 and 15 July, which by Brasília time lands in the mid-afternoon — worth locking in a table early.
When those semi-finals do kick off, Comuna in Botafogo and Boteco Belmonte in Ipanema are reliable, screen-heavy picks for watching with a crowd rather than alone.
With the league on hold, this is the quiet week to catch up on Golden Run photos, city exhibitions and the beach before Brasileirão action resumes later in the month.
09
Business & Markets
WEEK IN FIGURES
The Ibovespa closed Friday up nearly 3%, at 177,866.37 points — its best close since 14 May and a third straight positive week, after softer-than-expected inflation data.
The dollar fell back into the R$5.10 range on Friday, its third consecutive losing session against the real, a helpful move for anyone paid in reais but budgeting in hard currency.
Looking ahead, the Selic base rate sits at 14.25% after three straight quarter-point cuts, with the market watching the Copom’s next decision — useful context for expat professionals tracking loan and savings rates into August.
10
Plan Ahead
THE WEEK
Sun 12 Jul — Golden Run morning, beach afternoon, choro in Laranjeiras tonight — 24°C, low rain risk
Mon 13 Jul — Warm, mostly dry day (19-27°C) — good for outdoor coworking or a Jardim Botânico coffee
Tue 14 Jul — Cold front brings rain and a 29°C high — plan an indoor day; World Cup semi-final one, mid-afternoon BRT
Wed 15 Jul — Cooler and calmer around 22°C — World Cup semi-final two, again mid-afternoon BRT
Late Jul — Copom’s next rate decision meets 28-29 July — one for the calendar if you’re watching Brazilian interest rates
Background: Rio de Janeiro Nightlife Tonight — July 11, 2026.
Background: Rio de Janeiro Daily Brief — Saturday, July 11, 2026.
11
FAQ
QUICK ANSWERS
Will the Golden Run mess up my Sunday plans in Ipanema or Copacabana?
Only if you’re driving or booking a ride before early afternoon — the race closes stretches of Leblon, Ipanema, Copacabana, Botafogo and the Aterro do Flamengo through the morning.
Walking, cycling or using the Metrô are all unaffected, so it’s a good day to leave the car or app-ride at home and explore on foot instead.
Is the sea too cold to swim in July?
Not really — winter water around Copacabana and Ipanema typically runs 21-23°C, cool but comfortable for a proper swim rather than just a paddle.
Stick between the flags at a manned posto, especially after any rain, and you’ll be fine for a midday dip.
Where can I watch the World Cup this week as a newcomer?
With the Brasileirão paused for the World Cup, the semi-finals on 14 and 15 July are the city’s next big football draw, landing mid-afternoon Brasília time.
Comuna in Botafogo and Boteco Belmonte in Ipanema are solid, screen-friendly picks if you want to watch alongside a crowd rather than at home.