Buying and owning property in Rio.
Practical, picture-led guides for the foreign buyer. We sell apartments and villas in the city's best neighborhoods and run them as short-stay rentals when owners are away — so everything here comes from deals we've actually closed and guests we've actually hosted.
The Foreign Buyer's Complete Guide to Rio de Janeiro Real Estate
The CPF, the bank account, the six neighborhoods that matter, the closing process, the taxes nobody warns you about, and a 90-day checklist you can actually tick off. Everything a buyer in New York, London or Lisbon needs before the first viewing.
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Copacabana vs Ipanema vs Leblon: where should you actually live?
Three beaches, three personalities, three very different addresses to wake up at — compared properly on price per square metre, doorman culture, restaurants and English fluency.
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Why 2026 is the year Americans, Europeans and Brits are buying Rio
The currency, the digital-nomad visa, the flight-to-lifestyle and the per-square-metre maths that finally adds up — with numbers you can toggle between USD, EUR, GBP and BRL.
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The Other Rio: Joá, São Conrado and the quiet side of luxury
Five minutes south of Leblon there is a corridor most travel guides skip: cliff villas, a private gated beach, a golf course in the rainforest. A photo essay with an interactive map.
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Yes, you can own beachfront in Rio: the legal walk-through
The myth says foreigners can't own near the water. The truth is more interesting — mostly fine, with two rules to know and one place where it isn't, plus a live closing-cost calculator.
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What a Rio apartment actually earns: the rental-yield guide
Gross short-stay yield by neighborhood, the costs that quietly halve the headline, and the unglamorous list of what we'd actually buy for income today. The number to plan around is the net.
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The real cost of buying in Rio: every fee, tax and line item
The sticker price is not the price. Every cost between the agreed number and the keys — ITBI, notary, registry, lawyer, money movement — in the order it leaves your account.
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Selling your Rio apartment: the foreign owner's exit guide
How a Rio sale works from the owner's chair, the capital-gains maths in reais, and the single Central Bank registration — done the day you bought — that decides whether the money comes home cleanly or becomes a project.
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The 10-year math: what a Rio apartment actually returns
Annual yield is a snapshot. The ten-year picture is a different conversation — rent compounded, BRL appreciation, currency, IRR sensitivity and three honest scenarios from owners on my book.
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Rio vs Lisbon vs Miami: where should the foreign buyer put the money?
Three coastlines, three currencies, three very different markets. The side-by-side a foreign buyer with a one-and-a-half-million-dollar budget actually needs — price, yield, tax, residency, exit, lived experience.
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Taxes for the foreign owner of a Rio apartment
Every Brazilian tax line a non-resident owner actually pays — at purchase, during ownership, on rental income, on sale and back home. No fearmongering, just the rates, the filing windows and the four mistakes to avoid.
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Safety in Rio: an honest guide for the foreign buyer
Not the headline version and not the brochure version. What an experienced local broker actually believes about safety in the neighborhoods our clients buy in — geography, the building, daily habits, three real owner scenarios.
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Renovating a Rio apartment as a foreign owner
Building rules, three scopes, realistic R$ per square metre, the schedule Rio actually keeps, the team you need and four mistakes that destroy a foreign-owner renovation. Written for the owner who is six time zones away.
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