São João in Rio: The Best Arraiás and Forró This Weekend

By The Rio Times | Created at 2026-06-13 07:08:28 | Updated at 2026-06-14 13:26:37 1 day ago

Rio de Janeiro · What’s On

Key Facts

  • It peaks this weekend. June 13 is Saint Anthony’s Day, the first big night of Rio’s festa junina season.
  • The giant arraial. Festa Junina da Gigante fills Porto Maravilha from June 12 to 14, free, with forró, quadrilha and food.
  • The forró home. São Cristóvão’s Centro Luiz Gonzaga keeps the Northeast alive every June weekend.
  • Neighbourhood parties. Free quermesses pop up from Centro to Botafogo all weekend.
  • Festa meets football. It all lands as Brazil open their World Cup on Saturday night.

São João in Rio turns the whole city into a winter party this weekend, as the festas juninas hit their first peak on Saint Anthony’s night. From a giant free arraial on the docks to the forró heartland of São Cristóvão, here is where to find the best of it from June 13 to 14.

A São João festa junina celebration in Rio de JaneiroForró, quadrilha and Northeastern food fill Rio’s arraiás through June. (Photo: Alexandre Macieira/Riotur)

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The big one: Festa Junina da Gigante

The weekend’s headline arraial is the Festa Junina da Gigante at Porto Maravilha, in front of the Yup Star wheel, billed as the city’s largest and most traditional. It runs Friday to Sunday, June 12 to 14, with free entry.

Saturday and Sunday it opens from noon to 10pm, with forró and regional shows, quadrilha dancing, typical food and drink, games and artisan stalls. It is the easiest single stop if you want the full festa in one place.

São Cristóvão: the forró heartland

For the real thing year-round, head to the Centro Luiz Gonzaga das Tradições Nordestinas in São Cristóvão, Rio’s monument to Northeastern culture. Through June it hosts forró, nordestino trios, quadrilhas and typical food on weekends, including this one.

This is where Rio’s huge community from the Northeast gathers, and the energy shows it. Go hungry, and be ready to dance.

Quermesses across the city

Beyond the big names, free neighbourhood quermesses fill the weekend. There is a festa at Praça Tiradentes in Centro on Saturday June 13 from 6pm, and another in Botafogo, on Rua Bambina, on Sunday June 14 from 4pm.

Where What When Cost
Porto Maravilha Festa Junina da Gigante — the city’s biggest arraial Jun 12–14, Sat–Sun noon–10pm Free
São Cristóvão Centro Luiz Gonzaga — forró & Northeastern food June weekends Low-cost
Praça Tiradentes, Centro Festa junina Sat Jun 13, from 6pm Free (ticket)
Rua Bambina, Botafogo Neighbourhood arraiá Sun Jun 14, from 4pm Free (ticket)

What to eat and drink

Festa junina food is half the point. Look for canjica and pamonha made from corn, paçoca, pé-de-moleque and grilled cheese on a stick, washed down with warm quentão, the spiced cane-spirit drink that makes the winter night glow.

Most arraiás price plates cheaply and in cash, so bring small notes. The forró bands rarely stop, and the quadrilha — a playful mock-wedding square dance — is as fun to watch as to join.

Festa meets the World Cup

This year the party shares the weekend with football: Brazil open their World Cup against Morocco on Saturday evening, and the free Arena Copacabana fan zone screens the game on the beach. Many arraiás will have a screen up too.

That makes Saturday a rare double bill — forró before the match, football at kickoff, and back to the dancing after. Plan your route so you are not crossing the city at peak.

Frequently Asked Questions

When does São João peak in Rio in 2026?

The first peak is Saint Anthony’s Day on June 13, and the season runs through the June weekends, with Saint John’s Day on June 24.

What is the biggest free arraial?

The Festa Junina da Gigante at Porto Maravilha, June 12 to 14, is billed as Rio’s largest and most traditional, with free entry and full forró, food and quadrilha.

Where can I find forró year-round?

The Centro Luiz Gonzaga das Tradições Nordestinas in São Cristóvão is Rio’s home of Northeastern music and food, busiest on June weekends.

Is the food expensive?

No — arraiás keep plates cheap and cash-based. Bring small notes for canjica, pamonha, grilled cheese and warm quentão.

Can I catch the World Cup and the festa?

Yes. Brazil’s Saturday-night opener is screened free at Arena Copacabana and at many arraiás, so you can do both in one evening.

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