Rio de Janeiro Daily Brief for Sunday, June 14, 2026
A draw, then. Brazil opened their World Cup with a 1-1 against Morocco last night, and the city woke up wanting to talk about it.
It was not the start anyone wanted, but Vinícius Júnior’s equaliser kept the unbeaten opening record intact. Sunday is the day to digest it over a long lunch and a cold beer.
And the weather is playing along. At 24°C and mostly dry, this is a proper Rio Sunday — the kind made for the beach, the Lagoa and an unhurried afternoon.
Make the most of it today, because the rain moves in tomorrow. Sunday is the city at its most relaxed, and the calendar is full of gentle, open-air ways to spend it.

01
FOUR-DAY OUTLOOK
Sunday is the day to be outside. Expect warm, mostly clear skies and a high near 24°C, with only a one-in-five chance of a passing shower to interrupt the afternoon.
Dress light and easy: beachwear by day, a thin layer for the cooler evening. Take sunglasses and a little sunscreen, because the cloud cover is thin and the midday sun still has some bite.
The catch is Monday, when the rain chance jumps above one in two and stays unsettled into Tuesday. Today is clearly the weekend’s better day, so treat it that way.
02
SNAPSHOT
A slow, sociable Sunday — beach in the morning, samba by night.
03
SUNDAY IN RIO
Rio’s classic Sunday market
If there is one thing Rio does on a Sunday, it is the Feira Hippie de Ipanema, the open-air craft market that has filled Praça General Osório every Sunday since 1968. It runs from roughly 9 am to 6 pm, and it is as much a place to wander as to buy, the kind of unhurried morning the city seems designed for.
The stalls cover the full Rio spectrum — paintings and prints, leatherwork and jewellery, hammocks, carved wood, beachwear, and the kind of handmade keepsakes that actually feel worth carrying home rather than the usual airport tat. Prices are negotiable, and a friendly attempt at haggling is part of the ritual rather than a faux pas; vendors expect a little back-and-forth, and the mood is warm rather than pushy. Take your time and let the better stalls reveal themselves as you go, since the standout work tends to sit a little off the main drag.
Come hungry, because the food corner at the back is half the reason locals turn up at all. The stalls of acarajé, tapioca and grilled skewers there are some of the best street food in the Zona Sul, and they make an easy, cheap lunch before you drift the two blocks down to the beach. Bring cash, since most vendors prefer it, and a tote bag if you think anything might follow you home. Get there before midday if you can, as the lanes grow shoulder-to-shoulder by early afternoon.
The car-free Sunday everyone waits for
On Sundays the seafront lanes along Ipanema, Leblon and Copacabana close to cars, and the city reclaims them. Joggers, cyclists, families and skaters take over the avenue, and the whole stretch becomes one long, easy promenade right beside the sand, with vendors and coconut stands set up the length of it.
At 24°C, the beach itself is the obvious draw. Ipanema near Posto 9 is the lively heart of it, but the morning light is gentlest before noon, so go early if you want a calmer patch and a clearer view across to Dois Irmãos. Rent a chair and a parasol from a barraca, order a coco gelado, and settle in; there is no need to plan beyond that.
The Lagoa Rodrigo de Freitas is the other great Sunday option, its flat seven-kilometre circuit perfect for a slow loop on foot or by rented bike. The kiosks around the water are at their busiest today, many with live music by late afternoon, so it is as much a social scene as a stroll — which is exactly the point on a Rio Sunday.
A slow Sunday cup near the market
A Sunday is for lingering over coffee, not rushing it. If you are doing the Feira Hippie, Aussie Coffee is a short walk away in Ipanema, tucked into a passage off R. Visconde de Pirajá, and it pours a proper flat white to start the morning.
For somewhere greener, Empório Jardim near the Jardim Botânico keeps a calm, unhurried feel even on a busy weekend. It is the kind of place to sit with a coffee and the remains of the morning paper while the city wakes up slowly around you.
Most coworking spaces are closed on a Sunday, and that is no bad thing. If you do need to send a message or two, Urban Bean in Botafogo keeps weekend hours and a steady connection, but today really is a day to leave the laptop shut.
Green and quiet, away from the crowds
If the beach feels too busy and the market too bustling, the Jardim Botânico is the gentle alternative. Its avenues of towering imperial palms, orchid houses and shaded paths make it one of the calmest corners of the city, and on a warm Sunday morning the air under the canopy stays cool and still. It is a place to slow your pace right down, camera in hand or not, and the resident toucans and marmosets are a regular bonus.
Next door, Parque Lage is free and even prettier — a grand old mansion wrapped around a courtyard café, with trails running up toward the foot of Corcovado for those who want to stretch their legs. The café tables under the arches are a lovely spot for a late breakfast, and together the two make an easy, unhurried morning that asks almost nothing of you beyond showing up.
Sunday samba at Pedra do Sal
There is no better way to close a Rio Sunday than the samba roda at Pedra do Sal, in the old port district of Saúde. The roda gathers around the historic stone steps from about 8 pm, and the music carries well into the night, free and open to anyone who turns up with a willingness to join in.
This is the spiritual home of carioca samba, the ground where the rhythm took shape over a century ago among the dockworkers and Bahian families who settled here. The crowd is a warm mix of locals, seasoned musicians and the curious, and the playing is the real thing rather than a show put on for visitors. Buy a beer or a caipirinha from one of the stalls, find a spot on the cobbles, and let the circle pull you in at its own pace.
Go early if you want to be close to the music, because the square fills quickly once the playing starts and the best vantage points go first. Keep an eye on your things in the crowd, take only what you need for the evening, and a ride app is the easy and sensible way home once the night winds down.
04
TRANSPORT
Sunday is the easiest day to move around Rio. Traffic is light, the Metrô runs on a relaxed schedule, and with the seafront lanes closed to cars, much of the Zona Sul is best explored on foot or by bike anyway.
For Pedra do Sal in the evening, the VLT light rail reaches the port district and is the simplest way in. Coming home late, a ride app is the safer bet than walking through quiet streets; book ahead, as demand climbs once the samba winds down.
05
LUNCH & DINNER
Lunch: Sunday lunch in Rio is a long, lazy affair, and feijoada is the traditional order. Casa da Feijoada in Ipanema serves it all week, but Sunday is when it feels right — go early and plan to do very little afterwards.
Dinner: If you are heading to Pedra do Sal, eat light and graze from the stalls there. Otherwise, the botequins of Botafogo do an easy Sunday dinner, with cold beer and petiscos in a relaxed, unhurried mood.
06
GOOD TO KNOW
Banks are closed on Sundays, and many smaller shops keep shorter hours or stay shut entirely. The markets and beach kiosks run on cash as much as cards, so carry a little money for the day and do not rely on tapping everywhere.
A reminder for the week ahead: the Copom meets Tuesday and Wednesday to decide the Selic rate, currently 14.50%, and a feriado-free week means business runs as normal once Monday comes around.
07
FOR NEWCOMERS
Sunday is the day Rio shows newcomers what it is really about. The car-free seafront, the market, the samba at night — none of it costs much, and all of it is built around being outside and among people.
If you are new in town, this is the easiest day to start feeling at home. Walk the beach promenade, browse the Feira Hippie, end the evening at a samba roda, and you will understand the city’s rhythm better than any guidebook could teach you.
08
THE MORNING AFTER
Brazil’s World Cup began with a 1-1 draw against Morocco at MetLife Stadium last night, and it was a harder evening than the favourites had hoped. Morocco took the lead through Ismael Saibari in the 21st minute and looked the sharper side for long spells.
Vinícius Júnior rescued the point eleven minutes later, cutting in from the left and curling a fine right-footed shot past Yassine Bounou for his tenth international goal. The draw stretched Brazil’s unbeaten run in World Cup openers to 21 matches, but few here will pretend it was convincing.
The result reshapes Group C. Scotland beat Haiti 1-0 to sit top on three points, leaving Brazil and Morocco level on one apiece, so Friday’s match against Haiti in Philadelphia now carries real weight.
Today’s World Cup action moves elsewhere: Netherlands face Japan at 5 pm BRT and Côte d’Ivoire meet Ecuador at 8 pm BRT, both worth a watch if the football mood lingers.
09
WEEK IN FIGURES
Markets are closed for the weekend, but the week ahead is a big one. The Ibovespa ended Friday down 0.21% at 171,133 points, holding most of its recent gains and staying up around 6.2% for the year so far.
The real has had a steadier run lately, with the dollar settling back below R$5.10 as tension in the Middle East eased. That calmer backdrop sets the stage for the only date that really matters this week.
The Copom meets Tuesday and Wednesday to decide the Selic rate, currently 14.50%. Much of the market is leaning toward a further cut, though stubborn inflation expectations leave the outcome genuinely open — expect attention to sharpen from Monday.
10
THE WEEK
11
QUICK ANSWERS
What was the score in Brazil vs Morocco?
It finished 1-1 at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey. Morocco took the lead through Ismael Saibari in the 21st minute, before Vinícius Júnior equalised eleven minutes later, cutting in from the left and curling a right-footed finish past Yassine Bounou for his tenth international goal.
The draw was below Brazil’s hopes for an opener, though it did extend their unbeaten run in first matches to 21. With Scotland beating Haiti 1-0 to top the group, Group C is finely poised, and Brazil’s game against Haiti on Friday June 19 now matters a great deal.
What is happening in Rio on a Sunday?
Sunday is Rio’s big open-air day. The Feira Hippie de Ipanema fills Praça General Osório from around 9 am to 6 pm, the seafront lanes close to cars for walkers and cyclists, and the Lagoa circuit comes alive with weekend crowds.
In the evening, the samba roda at Pedra do Sal in Saúde is the classic close to the day, free and open from about 8 pm. Between the market, the beach and the music, you can fill a whole Sunday without spending much at all.
What is free to do in Rio today?
Plenty. MAM Rio on the Flamengo waterfront is free every Sunday, Parque Lage is free all year round, and the Pedra do Sal samba roda in the evening costs nothing but the price of a drink from the stalls around the square.
The beaches and the car-free seafront promenade are free too, of course, and browsing the Feira Hippie de Ipanema or the Feira do Lavradio antiques fair in Lapa costs only whatever you choose to buy. Between the markets, the parks, the beach and the music, it is an easy day to enjoy fully on a small budget.
What is the weather like this week?
Sunday is the pick of it: warm and mostly clear near 24°C, with only a 20% chance of a passing shower. It is a good day for the beach, the Lagoa or an outdoor market, and the evening stays mild enough for the samba at Pedra do Sal.
Monday is the change, with the rain chance climbing above 55% and staying unsettled into Tuesday near 22°C, before easing back midweek. Pack light layers and an umbrella for the start of the working week, but make the most of the dry, warm conditions while they last today.
Rio de Janeiro Daily Brief, your Rio de Janeiro city guide for Sunday, June 14, 2026. All times in Brasília time (BRT, UTC–3). Weather: open-source API. Markets: B3 and Reuters. Sport: FIFA and CBF. Updated: 2026-06-14T07:30:00Z · Rafael Silva Santos.
Related: São Paulo Daily Brief for Sunday · Rio de Janeiro Daily Brief for Saturday