Study abroad in Rio de Janeiro
Housing, transport, universities, language expectations and daily life for exchange students in Rio de Janeiro.
Country
BrazilStudent Budget
BRL 2,200 – 4,500/month
Transport Card
RioCard / Bilhete Único Carioca (BUC)
Population
City: ~6.7 million (IBGE 2022 census); Greater Rio metro area: ~13.2 million
Study abroad in Rio de Janeiro: student life
Study abroad in Rio de Janeiro works best when you choose by university fit, neighbourhood and daily routine, not just the city photo. Rainforest mountains, world-famous beaches, and samba culture wrapped around a major university city — Rio is Brazil's most iconic exchange destination. Check campus commute, night safety and housing before committing.
Who loves this city?
Students who want beach, mountain, and major-city culture in the same daily routine — and who are drawn to a more physical, music-driven, extroverted social life than Northern Europe or East Asia typically offers.
What makes it special
Rio is one of the only major world cities where a rainforest-covered mountain, a UNESCO-listed urban landscape, and some of the planet's most famous beaches all sit within a 30-minute commute of a top university campus.
Newcomer shocks
- Steep, favela-covered hillsides directly bordering wealthy beachfront neighborhoods — the geography and social contrasts are visible everywhere, all the time.
- Heat and humidity persist even in Rio's 'winter' (June–August), which still sees daytime highs around 26°C.
- Petty-theft awareness (phone, bag, jewelry) becomes a daily habit within the first week, not paranoia.
- Public transport quality is uneven — modern VLT and metro lines coexist with older, crowded bus routes.
Map
Weather in Rio de Janeiro & what to pack
Rio de Janeiro's weather affects clothing, transport and social life more than brochures suggest. Use the month table to plan heat, rain, cold, humidity or daylight before arrival.
| Month | Conditions | Note |
|---|---|---|
| January 31.5° / 24.1° | 🌧️ Rain only — 137.1mm, peak wet seasonRain only — 137.1mm, peak wet season, hot | Longest days of the year, ~13.5h of daylight (Southern Hemisphere summer) |
| February 32.2° / 24.4° | 🌧️ Rain only — 130.4mmRain only — 130.4mm, hot | ~13h daylight; Carnival season heat and humidity peak |
| March 31.2° / 24° | 🌧️ Rain only — 135.8mmRain only — 135.8mm, hot | ~12.5h daylight, transition out of summer |
| April 30° / 23° | 🌧️ Rain only — 94.9mm, rainfall starts droppingRain only — 94.9mm, rainfall starts dropping, hot | ~11.5h daylight |
| May 27.8° / 20.7° | 🌧️ Rain only — 69.8mmRain only — 69.8mm, warm | ~11h daylight, noticeably cooler evenings |
| June 26.7° / 19.3° | 🌧️ Rain only — 42.7mm, driest stretch beginsRain only — 42.7mm, driest stretch begins, warm | ~10.5h daylight, shortest days of the year |
| July 26.4° / 18.7° | 🌧️ Rain only — 41.9mm, driest monthRain only — 41.9mm, driest month, warm | ~10.5h daylight; coolest month, still mild by global standards |
| August 27° / 19.1° | 🌧️ Rain only — 44.5mmRain only — 44.5mm, warm | ~11h daylight, days lengthening again |
| September 26.7° / 19.6° | 🌧️ Rain only — 53.6mmRain only — 53.6mm, warm | ~11.5h daylight, transition into spring |
| October 28.2° / 21.1° | 🌧️ Rain only — 86.5mm, rainfall picking upRain only — 86.5mm, rainfall picking up, hot | ~12.5h daylight |
| November 29.4° / 22.3° | 🌧️ Rain only — 97.8mmRain only — 97.8mm, hot | ~13h daylight |
| December 30.3° / 23.2° | 🌧️ Rain only — 134.2mm, wet season beginsRain only — 134.2mm, wet season begins, hot | ~13.5h daylight, longest days, Réveillon season heat |
Packing checklist
- Lightweight, breathable clothing year-round — even Rio's 'winter' (June–August) reaches ~26°C by day
- A light rain jacket for the December–March wet season
- Reef-safe sunscreen — UV is intense year-round at this latitude
- Comfortable walking shoes for steep, cobblestone neighborhoods like Santa Teresa
- A cross-body or anti-theft bag for beach days and transit
Cost of living for students in Rio de Janeiro
Cost of Living Index
37.0 / 100
Affordable · World avg ≈ 44
The budget to study abroad in Rio de Janeiro is mostly rent-led: use BRL 700-2200/month for rooms and BRL 2200-4500/month as the wider monthly planning range. Keep a buffer for deposit, transport and first-week setup.
| Category | Range / mo | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Shared Room Rent | BRL 700 – 1,300 | A room in a shared flat near campus (Gávea, Botafogo, Flamengo) — the realistic option for most exchange students. |
| Studio Or 1br Rent | BRL 2,200 – 4,150 | 1-bedroom apartment: ~R$2,208/month outside the centre, ~R$4,144/month in/near the centre (Numbeo, Jun 2026). |
| Utilities | BRL 400 – 700 | Electricity, water, and garbage for an average apartment — Numbeo average R$605/month for an 85m² flat (Jun 2026). |
Going out & dining
Source: Numbeo · Prices approximate, updated periodically.
Student housing in Rio de Janeiro
Housing in Rio de Janeiro should be solved before arrival: compare neighbourhood, campus route and contract terms, not just price. Start with the university, verified platforms and student groups with scam checks.
Gávea
highRight next to the PUC-Rio campus — shortest commute, leafy, upper-middle-class
Botafogo
mediumBest value-for-location balance — close to metro, 15–20 min to Gávea by bus
Flamengo
mediumQuieter, near Flamengo Park and the bay, good for students who want green space
Santa Teresa
mediumBohemian, artsy, hillside character — popular with international/creative students
Where to search
Official contacts
PUC-Rio Escritório de Assuntos Internacionais (International Office)
First point of contact for exchange student housing guidance — can point to vetted listings and past-student recommendations near Gávea.
Student residences
University residences or recommended housing
Useful first landing if you apply early and accept less flexibility.
Private platforms
Student groups
International student groups
Useful for flatmates and scam alerts; always verify the contract, landlord identity and payment route.
Documents to prepare
Passport + visa (VITEM IV) or proof of in-process application
PUC-Rio acceptance/enrollment letter
Proof of funds or scholarship
CPF (apply for this immediately upon arrival — most landlords and digital banks require it)
Timing
Start the housing search 2–3 months before arrival, but expect to confirm a lease only after arriving and viewing in person — remote-only leases carry higher scam risk.
Book short-term housing (Airbnb/hostel) for the first 1–3 weeks to allow in-person viewings.
Deposit & contract notes
Brazilian leases (contrato de locação) often request a guarantor (fiador) or a higher deposit (caução) from foreign tenants without local credit history — expect 1–3 months' rent as deposit.
Get any verbal agreement in writing before transferring money — Pix transfers are instant and hard to reverse.
Red flags
Any landlord asking for full payment via international wire transfer before an in-person or live video viewing
Listings significantly below the neighborhood's typical price range with vague photos
Pressure to sign or pay within hours without time to review the contract
Is Rio de Janeiro safe for students?
Safety Index
24.6 / 100
Take extra precautions
Crime Index
75.4 / 100
High crime — be cautious
Source: Numbeo · Lower crime = safer. Higher safety = safer.
Rio de Janeiro is usually manageable for students, but the real risks are practical: petty theft, late-night routes, traffic, housing scams or weak arrival planning. Save emergency numbers and test your commute.
Zona Sul neighborhoods near PUC-Rio (Gávea, Botafogo, Flamengo, Urca) are generally safe by day with normal city-level caution. Risk concentrates around isolated beach stretches at night, Centro late on weekends, and any favela without a vetted local contact. Petty theft (phone/bag snatching), not violent crime, is the realistic day-to-day risk for students.
Top risks
- Phone/bag snatching on the beach, in the Lapa nightlife area, and on crowded buses
- Unlicensed street taxis — use Uber/99 instead
- Leaving valuables visible in parked cars or on outdoor café tables
Getting around Rio de Janeiro
Transport in Rio de Janeiro works best once you activate the right pass or card in week one. A direct campus route often matters more than the most famous neighbourhood.
🚇 Metro Rio (Line 1/2)
Connects Zona Sul (Botafogo, Copacabana, Ipanema) to Centro; does not reach Gávea directly — combine with a bus or Uber for the last stretch.
Municipal student half-fare card available for enrolled students meeting eligibility criteria — confirm current rules with PUC-Rio.
🚆 VLT (light rail, Centro)
Covers Centro and the port area (Praça Mauá, Cinelândia) — not useful for a Zona Sul/Gávea daily commute.
🚌 Bilhete Único Carioca (BUC) integrated fare
The most cost-effective way to combine bus + metro + VLT for a daily campus commute.
Apply for the municipal student fare card once enrolled.
🚌 Uber / 99
The standard choice for late-night travel — far safer than walking or hailing a street taxi after dark.
Things to do in Rio de Janeiro as a student
Events in Rio de Janeiro help students build groups and understand the city without spending only on expensive plans. Mix local culture, campus events, festivals and repeatable low-cost routines.
Student discounts & perks in Rio de Janeiro
Student perks in Rio de Janeiro can reduce transport, food and culture if you carry proof of enrolment. Activate them early because small savings matter by the end of the month.
Museums & Culture
Culture and university discounts
Check student-card discounts; not every venue applies them automatically to international students.
Food Savings
University canteens and local cheap eats
Use canteens, markets and simple lunch menus before relying on restaurants.
Plan safe campus routes and avoid relying on long late-night transfers. Fares & passes
Universities in Rio de Janeiro for exchange students
PUC-Rio (Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro) are the main reference points. Compare faculty fit, language, campus route and housing before choosing.
PUC-Rio (Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro)
A private, internationally well-connected campus in Gávea, walking distance from Rio's botanical garden and Zona Sul — one of Brazil's most exchange-friendly universities.
Student social life in Rio de Janeiro
Social life in Rio de Janeiro starts faster when you join faculty groups, sport, exchange networks or weekly routines. Do not rely only on nightlife; repeated groups usually build better friendships.
What Students Usually Get Wrong
Student Associations
Meeting Places 3
Public Groups 1
PUC-Rio International Students
Run by PUC-Rio's international office for incoming exchange students — orientation info and buddy-program signup.
Forums & Advice 1
Erasmus+ Community
Official network for exchange students — forums, contacts, and city guides.
r/brasil discussions on Rio student life
General peer discussion on living/studying in Rio — useful for anecdotes, treat advice as informal, not authoritative.