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Friday 10 July 2026 Information


São Paulo · Nightlife

If You Only Go to One Place

D-Edge

Tonight’s Freak Chic party brings Copenhagen DJ Nilu to the decks at one of the world’s most respected electronic clubs – it’s the single best specific, ticketed thing happening tonight and it sums up why São Paulo’s clubbing scene is taken seriously worldwide.

Tonight at a Glance

—D-Edge World-ranked electronic club in Barra Funda; tonight’s Freak Chic party debuts Danish DJ Nilu – clubbers and music heads, arrive after midnight

—Bar Brahma São Paulo’s most famous corner; Friday is samba de raiz night with two live groups back to back – tourists, locals, everyone dancing

—Raiz Club Hidden speakeasy under a Pinheiros restaurant; tonight’s ticketed Amy Winehouse tribute show at 9 pm – couples and music lovers, book ahead

—Ó do Borogodó The samba room every local swears by in Vila Madalena; nightly rodas from about 10 pm – solo travellers and groups, dance with strangers

—Villa Country The biggest sertanejo house in Brazil; a reliable Friday standby with live bands from around 9 pm – line-dancing energy, big groups

Tonight’s real headline is D-Edge’s Freak Chic party with Copenhagen’s Nilu behind the decks, but Friday in São Paulo is stacked – Raiz Club’s Amy Winehouse tribute and Bona’s one-year anniversary show both kick off at 9 pm, and Bar Brahma’s Friday samba de raiz warms up República before midnight. The classic circuit: a rooftop sunset, a 9 pm ticketed show, samba in Vila Madalena or Centro, then the clubs of Barra Funda until sunrise.

Tonight across Sao Paulo. (Photo internet reproduction)RTAsk Rio TimesWhat to do, where to go in São Paulo›

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What’s On Tonight

Freak Chic featuring Nilu (Copenhagen) – his São Paulo debut mixing indie dance and melodic house — at D-Edge, from midnight. the confirmed Friday headline at South America’s most internationally recognised electronic club

Amy Winehouse tribute show — at Raiz Club, 9 pm. a ticketed, intimate speakeasy gig under a Pinheiros restaurant – arrive 8:30 pm for a cocktail first

Joaquim celebrates one year of “Varanda dos Palpites” — at Bona Casa de Música, 9 pm. a candlelit, listening-room anniversary show in one of the city’s best-curated small venues

Samba de raiz with Na Palma da Mão and Dose Certa — at Bar Brahma (Centro), 9 pm and 11:30 pm. the tradition every Friday on the corner immortalised in the song “Sampa” – live samba, chopp, dancing

Nightly samba and choro roda — at Ó do Borogodó, from around 10 pm. the go-to Vila Madalena samba house – small, sweaty, joyful, all ages

Live sertanejo residency show — at Villa Country, from around 9 pm (Saloon opens 8 pm). the country-pop institution that launched Luan Santana and Jorge & Mateus – big group energy

Sunset DJ set on the rooftop deck — at Skye Bar, Hotel Unique, from 8:30 pm. the classic warm-up: red pool, panoramic Ibirapuera views, smart-casual crowd

The Circuit: When to Go Where

Warm up 7-9 pm – sunset on Skye Bar’s rooftop deck (DJ from 8:30 pm) or a chopp on Bar Brahma’s corner terrace at Ipiranga x São João

Showtime 9 pm – book a ticketed gem: the Amy Winehouse tribute at Raiz Club or Joaquim’s anniversary show at Bona; arrive on time, seating fills fast

9 pm-midnight – Centro or Vila Madalena: Bar Brahma’s Friday samba de raiz, or the nightly roda at Ó do Borogodó, then bar-hop Rua Aspicuelta’s botecos

Midnight onward – Barra Funda: D-Edge’s Freak Chic with Nilu; Brazilians arrive well after midnight, so don’t rush over there early

All-nighter alternative – Água Branca’s Villa Country runs sertanejo dancing from around 9 pm to 3 am most Fridays, no electronic music required

Getting home – metro shuts around midnight, so book a 99 or Uber from inside the venue; expect a short weekend surge, wait it out with a saideira (one for the road)

Scenes & Sounds

Samba — Circle-of-musicians rodas you dance to, not watch – sweaty, joyful, mixed ages Where: Ó do Borogodó (Vila Madalena) and Bar Brahma’s Friday samba de raiz (Centro)

Electronic — São Paulo is one of the world’s most relevant electronic cities, with world-ranked sound and light design Where: D-Edge in Barra Funda, plus warehouse parties announced on Instagram

Sertanejo — Brazilian country-pop; huge, unironic fun with line-dancing energy and live bands Where: Villa Country, the largest and oldest sertanejo house in the country

Funk — Baile funk starts late and runs till morning – bass-heavy, body-moving, very Brazilian Where: Roving bailes announced on Instagram; ask locals for the night’s location

Jazz & MPB — Speakeasy cocktails and listening-room acoustics for grown-up nights out Where: Raiz Club and Bona Casa de Música, both in Pinheiros/Sumaré

Rooftop lounge — Golden-hour drinks that slide into a DJ set as the sky goes dark Where: Skye Bar at Hotel Unique, with 360-degree views over Ibirapuera and Paulista

Pick Your Night

Date night: Skye Bar rooftop for sunset drinks, then dinner – the red pool and skyline view do the romancing for you; smart casual

Solo and safe: Ó do Borogodó – a relaxed, welcoming samba crowd where going alone is completely normal

Dance till sunrise: D-Edge – Freak Chic tonight runs deep into the night, and Sunday’s SuperAfter goes until noon if you really don’t want it to end

Meet locals: Bar Brahma’s Friday samba de raiz – shared tables, chopp, and a crowd that loves showing visitors how it’s done

Meet other expats: The Week – internationally known LGBTQ+ club that draws travellers from everywhere, English widely spoken among staff and crowd

Where to Go

D-Edge — Barra Funda

An internationally recognised electronic music club with cutting-edge sound and light design, drawing a serious clubbing crowd of locals and visiting DJs alike

Tonight: Freak Chic party with Danish DJ Nilu’s São Paulo debut, mixing indie dance and melodic house

Best time: Runs Thursday to Sunday, each night a different resident party (Moving Thu, Freak Chic Fri, Nave Sat, SuperAfter Sun from 5 am); arrive after midnight

Cost: Entry via lists/lotes, typically R$60-150; cash and card accepted

Address: Av. Auro Soares de Moura Andrade, 141, Barra Funda

Phone: +55 11 3665-9500

Instagram: @dedgesp

Website: www.d-edge.com.br

Getting there: Rideshare recommended; nearest metro is Barra Funda (Linha 3-Vermelha), then a short Uber/99

Good to know: Buying ahead via lists is worth it for faster entry; smart clubwear, no flip-flops or shorts

Bar Brahma (Centro) — Centro / República

A boemia icon since 1948 on the corner immortalised in the song “Sampa”, with live samba and MPB nearly every night of the week

Tonight: Friday samba de raiz with Na Palma da Mão at 9 pm and Dose Certa at 11:30 pm in the Salão Principal

Best time: Fri-Sat nights are liveliest; arrive by 9-9:30 pm for a seat, open until 3 am Thu-Sat

Cost: Couvert artístico applies on live-music nights; chopp and caipirinhas are reasonably priced; cash and card

Address: Av. São João, 677 (corner Av. Ipiranga), Centro

Getting there: Metro República or Anhangabaú (Linha 3-Vermelha), short walk

Good to know: Walk-ins fine most nights but arrive early on weekends; casual dress

Raiz Club — Pinheiros

A hidden speakeasy under the Jacarandá restaurant, with jazz, MPB and cocktails in a discreet, intimate basement setting

Tonight: Ticketed Amy Winehouse tribute show at 9 pm

Best time: Open Thursday to Saturday, 7 pm-midnight; book tickets for headline shows, arrive early for a table

Cost: Ticketed shows via Sympla; cocktails and petiscos are mid-to-high priced; card preferred

Address: Rua Alves Guimarães, 153, Pinheiros

Phone: +55 11 3083-3003

Instagram: @raizclubsp

Getting there: Metro Faria Lima or Fradique Coutinho (Linha 4-Amarela), then a short walk or rideshare

Good to know: Book ahead for ticketed shows; smart casual, no shorts or trainers

Bona Casa de Música — Sumaré / Pinheiros

A small, carefully curated listening room known for intimate live shows from independent Brazilian artists

Tonight: Joaquim marks one year of his “Varanda dos Palpites” residency at 9 pm

Best time: Shows most nights Wed-Sun; arrive by 8:30 pm for dinner before the set starts

Cost: Ticketed via Sympla/Eventim, plus food and drink; card widely accepted

Address: Rua Dr. Paulo Vieira, 101, Sumaré

Instagram: @bona_casa_de_musica

Website: www.bona.art.br

Getting there: Rideshare or a short walk from Sumaré metro (Linha 2-Verde)

Good to know: Buy tickets ahead for named shows; casual but tidy dress

Ó do Borogodó — Vila Madalena / Pinheiros

The samba house every São Paulo local swears by – no-frills, brick-walled, with the city’s best samba and choro musicians rotating through nightly

Tonight: Reliable weekly standby: nightly samba and choro rodas from around 10 pm

Best time: Runs Mon-Sat with music from 9-10 pm; get there early since tables go fast, Saturday feijoada from 1 pm

Cost: Small cover (up to about R$25), bottled beer and caipirinhas are cheap; mostly cash-friendly

Address: Rua Horácio Lane, 21, Vila Madalena/Pinheiros

Phone: +55 11 3814-4087

Instagram: @odoborogodobar

Getting there: Metro Vila Madalena (Linha 2-Verde), then a 10-15 minute walk or short rideshare

Good to know: No booking; arrive early for a seat, dress is casual

Villa Country — Água Branca

The biggest and most traditional sertanejo house in Brazil, a 12,000 m² complex of stages, restaurants and dance floors that has launched major country-pop careers

Tonight: Reliable weekly Friday sertanejo show in the Saloon, doors from around 8 pm

Best time: Open Thu-Sun from 8 pm; big-name shows sell out, so check the week’s lineup before you go

Cost: Free entry to the restaurant until 10:30 pm, then a cover for the nightclub; card and Pix only

Address: Av. Francisco Matarazzo, 774, Água Branca

Website: villacountry.com.br

Getting there: Rideshare recommended; nearest metro is Água Branca (Linha 7-Rubi/CPTM)

Good to know: Book big-name shows ahead; smart casual, boots optional but on-theme

Skye Bar (Hotel Unique) — Jardim Paulista

One of the world’s most photographed rooftops, with a crimson pool and 360-degree views over Ibirapuera Park and the Paulista skyline

Tonight: Nightly DJ set from around 8:30 pm makes it a natural pre-balada stop

Best time: Best at golden hour, 6-8 pm, before the after-work crowd peaks; open late into the evening

Cost: Pricey by local standards – cocktails and small plates run high; a credit card is held as a tab deposit

Address: Av. Brigadeiro Luís Antônio, 4700, Jardim Paulista

Phone: +55 11 3055-4702

Instagram: @hotelunique

Website: www.hotelunique.com/en/skye-restaurante-bar

Getting there: Rideshare is easiest; nearest metro is Vila Mariana or Ana Rosa (Linha 1-Azul), then a short ride

Good to know: Reservations recommended on weekends; smart casual, no beachwear

The Week — Lapa / Água Branca

One of the largest and most famous gay clubs in Brazil, a 6,000 m² complex with two dance floors, lounges and an outdoor pool deck

Tonight: Reliable weekly Friday-to-Sunday programme of DJs; check its Instagram for the exact night’s lineup

Best time: Fridays and Saturdays are the big nights; doors open late, crowd peaks well after midnight

Cost: Entry ticket required, typically R$60-120; card and cash both used inside

Address: Rua Guaicurus, 324, Lapa/Água Branca

Phone: +55 11 3868-9944

Website: www.theweek.com.br

Getting there: Rideshare strongly recommended; the area is industrial and quiet outside the club

Good to know: Buy tickets ahead where possible; anything goes on dress, but bring ID

Neighbourhoods at a Glance

Vila Madalena / Pinheiros: Bohemian bar-hopping strip – samba houses, botecos spilling onto the street, a young-to-mixed crowd and street art everywhere

Centro / República: Grittier, more underground – historic boemia bars like Bar Brahma alongside warehouse parties and cultural spaces

Barra Funda / Água Branca: The clubbing and big-venue zone – D-Edge, Villa Country and The Week all sit within a short rideshare of each other

Jardins / Itaim Bibi: São Paulo’s dressed-up “see and be seen” zone – rooftop bars, upscale cocktails, higher prices

Sumaré / Alto de Pinheiros: Quieter, leafy streets hiding some of the city’s best small live-music rooms and speakeasies

LGBTQ+ Tonight

The Week — One of Brazil’s biggest and most famous gay clubs, with two dance floors and a pool deck; best on Friday and Saturday nights, international crowd

Frei Caneca street bars — The main strip of LGBTQ+ bars in the Jardins area, good for an easier, low-key warm-up before a bigger club night

Vila Madalena — Widely considered the city’s most LGBTQ+-friendly residential neighbourhood, with welcoming bars and a mixed, relaxed crowd

Money & How Paying Works

The comanda: at most clubs and some bars you get a tab card at the door – every drink and snack gets added to it, you settle up on your way out, and losing the card usually means a hefty fixed fine, so guard it like your ID

Couvert artístico: live-music bars and samba houses add a small mandatory cover for the musicians, usually R$15-50, on top of whatever you eat and drink

Cash vs card: most venues now take card and Pix, but small botecos and samba houses can be cash-only or cash-preferred – carry some notes just in case

Tipping: a 10 percent service charge is often already on the bill; if not, rounding up or adding roughly 10 percent is the norm and appreciated

Getting Home Safe

The metro typically stops running around midnight, so don’t rely on it once the night gets going – check the last train time for your line before you go out

Use 99 or Uber rather than street taxis – both are widely used, drivers are verified, and it’s the safest way to get back late at night

Order your ride from inside the venue or a well-lit doorway rather than standing on the street, and expect a short surge in price right at closing time – waiting 15-20 minutes with a last drink usually helps

Keep valuables minimal and your phone in a front pocket in crowded areas like Centro and Barra Funda late at night; it’s a big, lively city and normal city awareness goes a long way

Stick to well-trafficked streets and go in groups when walking between venues after midnight – most nightlife areas are safe but quieter side streets are best avoided alone

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to book ahead for São Paulo nightlife?

For ticketed live shows like tonight’s Raiz Club or Bona gigs, yes – book online in advance. For samba houses and clubs, arriving early or joining a guest list helps but walk-ins are usually fine.

What time do Brazilians actually go out?

Later than you’d think – dinner around 9-10 pm, bars fill from 10-11 pm, and clubs don’t peak until well after midnight. Pacing yourself matters more than arriving early.

Is it safe to go out alone as a foreigner?

Yes, especially in well-known spots like Ó do Borogodó or Bar Brahma – just use rideshare apps to get home rather than walking or hailing a street taxi late at night.

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