Explore Rio de Janeiro, Iguaçu Falls, Salvador, and the Beaches of Bahia

Few countries pack as much variety into a single trip as Brazil. This 12-day itinerary moves through four of the country's most distinct destinations - Rio de Janeiro's iconic cityscape, the raw scale of Iguaçu Falls, Salvador's Afro-Brazilian history and street life, and the calm of Bahia's Coconut Coast. Each stop is different in character, and together they give a genuine sense of just how much this country has to offer.

Explore Rio de Janeiro, Iguaçu Falls, Salvador, and the Beaches of Bahia

Days 1–3: Rio de Janeiro

Rio sets the tone from the moment you land. The city sits between mountains and sea, with Corcovado to the west, Sugarloaf at the mouth of the bay, and the famous arc of Copacabana Beach stretching along the Atlantic coast. It's a striking setting, and one that's best appreciated across a few days rather than rushed.

The first two days are free to explore at your own pace. The neighbourhood of Santa Teresa is worth the walk - a hilltop community of art studios, independent restaurants, and steep cobbled streets with views over the bay. The colourful Selarón Steps, tiled by Chilean artist Jorge Selarón over three decades, are nearby and well worth seeing in person.

Day three is given over to Rio's landmark sights with a private guide. The train up through the Tijuca Forest - the largest urban rainforest in the world - brings you to the summit of Corcovado Mountain and Christ the Redeemer, the 30-metre Art Deco statue that looks out over the entire city. From there, the tour takes in the Sambadrome, where Rio's legendary Carnival parades take place each February, the historic Maracanã Stadium, and finally Sugarloaf Mountain, reached by cable car in two stages for sweeping views across the bay as the afternoon light shifts.

Days 4–5: Iguaçu

Nothing quite prepares you for the scale of Iguaçu. The falls stretch nearly three kilometres across the border between Brazil and Argentina, made up of around 275 individual cascades dropping up to 82 metres. The Brazilian side gives you the panoramic view - the full width of the system spread out in front of you, with permanent rainbows forming in the mist below.

The Macuco Safari Tour takes you deeper in. An ecological bus ride through Iguaçu National Park is followed by a jungle trail on foot and then a boat ride directly to the base of the falls - you will get wet, and it is absolutely worth it. The national park itself is a UNESCO World Heritage Site with significant wildlife: toucans, giant anteaters, coatis, and over 400 recorded bird species. Even without the falls, it would be worth visiting.

Days 6–8: Salvador

Salvador is one of Brazil's most historically significant cities and one of its most distinctive. Founded in 1549 as the country's first colonial capital, it was the main port of entry for enslaved Africans brought to Brazil, and that history shapes everything here - the food, the music, the religious festivals, and the architecture of the Pelourinho, the UNESCO-listed historic centre at the heart of the city.

A private guided tour covers the key sites: the Farol da Barra lighthouse and its views across All Saints Bay, the Igreja do Senhor do Bonfim with its famous ribbon-tied railings and its significance as one of Brazil's most important pilgrimage churches, and the Mercado Modelo, a bustling arts and crafts market in a grand neoclassical building down by the old port. The Pelourinho itself is the highlight - a dense grid of painted colonial buildings, baroque churches, and open squares where capoeira is still practised in the street, and live percussion carries through the evenings.

Days 9–12: Praia do Forte

The final stop is a deliberate change of pace. Praia do Forte sits an hour north of Salvador on the Coconut Coast - a small beach town with wide Atlantic beaches, natural tidal pools formed by an offshore reef, and warm, calm water for most of the year. After ten days of cities and national parks, it's exactly what you’ll need.

It's not entirely without things to do. The Projeto TAMAR sea turtle conservation centre is based here and open to visitors - one of Brazil's most respected conservation projects, it protects five of the world's eight sea turtle species along this stretch of coastline. The village itself is small and walkable, with good seafood restaurants along the main street. But mostly, Praia do Forte is for slowing down, swimming, and making the most of the Bahian sun before heading home.

To book your Brazilian adventure, speak to your personal Travel Counsellor today. 

Set-jetting: The world's most cinematic destinations to visit right now

22 April 2026

More than half of all travellers now research a destination after seeing it on screen, and the results are genuinely exciting: set jetting is sending curious travellers to places they might never have otherwise considered, taking them deeper into destinations than a standard itinerary ever would. The best set-jetting trips aren't just about ticking off a filming location. They're about using a story you love as a way into somewhere real. Here are the destinations doing it best right now - and the shows that are sending people there.

This resort is the most striking place to experience Mount Fuji

22 April 2026

Most people see Mount Fuji from a distance – either from the Shinkansen window or briefly between buildings in Tokyo. Hanz Outdoor Resort, set directly on the northern shore of Lake Kawaguchiko, offers something meaningfully different. Here, the mountain dominates the view from your villa terrace, from the lake at dawn, and from the open-air thermal baths fed by natural waters sourced from Fuji itself. It's a base that works both for first-time visitors who want to understand why this mountain holds such significance in Japanese culture and for repeat travellers ready to explore the less-visited corners of the Fuji Five Lakes region. The resort has also been featured in National Geographic, Time Out, and described by Metro UK as “the most beautiful campsite they had ever seen”. Here are a few reasons why…

Why Botswana is one of Africa’s most rewarding safaris

22 April 2026

Known for its strong focus on conservation, low visitor numbers, and high-quality experiences, Botswana is one of Africa’s most rewarding safari destinations. What makes it special is the sense of space and the way each moment feels unhurried. One minute you might be watching elephants gather quietly along a riverbank, the next you’re following fresh tracks in the sand with a guide who reads the landscape like a story, where the experience builds naturally, without feeling staged.