Rio de Janeiro Travel Guide, Rio for Partiers
Rio de Janeiro, for partiers updatesorder Rio de Janeiro Travel Guide, Rio For Partiers nowPlanning Your Travel to Rio de Janeiroair tickets to Rio de JaneiroRio de Janeiro Travel Guide ForumRio de Janeiro Partners

What to bring

Clothes (all Seasons)
Your choices should be light in weight and color, as black clothes is looked down upon in the Candomble religion, a popular faith in the city. Bring one set of nice clothes, as there are many trendy clubs and restaurants that require elegant attire.
List based on one week’s stay:
3 Bermudas
1 Pants
7 underpants
4 T-shirts or short-sleeved shirts
1 long-sleeved shirt or sweater
1 pair of sandals or all-terrain shoes
1 pair social shoes
4 pairs of socks
1 light nylon rain jacket

Equipment
Sunglasses
Cheap watch
Digital camera (the smallest possible)
Disposable camera (for street events)
Anti-diarrhea medication
Toiletries (all types can be found here in case you forget)
Cap
Cellular phone: Check your provider’s coverage first, as there are several carriers that work with GSM system, allowing you to buy a chip (US$17), credits and pay local rates.

Money
Cheap spending (eating at the hostel, few restaurants, no hard-core clubbing, basic tours): US$25 a day
Average spending (restaurants and street food, hostel or cheap hotel, most of the tours): US$50 a day
All-out living (nice hotel, restaurants, all the tours, clubbing, shopping, massages etc): US$80 a day
We suggest you bring US$300 in cash and the rest you can either pay with your credit card or withdraw from cash-machines around the city (most work with Cirrus). If you plan on making larger purchases, like precious stones, bring traveller’s checks.

Petty Cash Pool
If you are in a group, instead of each person in the group paying for their beer, for the taxi, for the entrance and other small stuff, we recommend for you to chose one person who will carry the petty cash. Each morning, each member chips in R$50...

IDs and Cards
Passport
Student ID or Driver’s License
Tourist Visa
2 Credit Cards (Visa & Mastercard)

Before flying to Brazil
Call the closest Brazilian consulate and check with them on the required vaccines and visas. Listing of consulates around the world at:
http://www.brazil.org.uk/

What you don’t need to bring
Towel (use the hotel`s)
Safari Hat (please!)
Binoculars (available in jungle tours)
Swimming gear (please don`t wear US or European beach fashion in Brazil, you`ll stick out and get constantly bugged by vendors).
Snorkel (you can rent it)
Winter jacket
Laptop (use the internet cafes)

Privacy Policy - All rights reserved

Click Here For More Travel info on Salvador Brazil