São paulo gay
São Paulo is legendary across the globe for its Parada do Orgulho, the largest gay identity festival parade in the world. However, compared to its tropical brother Rio de Janeiro, foreigners recognize very little about Latin America’s largest and most populous city.
Guide to LGBT Pride Parade 2024 »
Gay nightlife in Sampa, as São Paulo is also known, rivals major cities like Fresh York and London. (One could even argue the city’s gay nightlife surpasses any gay club in the US or Europe.) By diurnal, São Paulo suggestions world-class gastronomy, visual arts, and architecture.
Dive in with the VamosGay 2024 Manual to São Paulo to plan your trip, unlock insider tips, and appreciate the best of the city!
NeighborhoodsLearn more about the diverse “gayborhoods” of São Paulo. View all » | Bars & ClubsA to Z listing of every bar, lounge, and club in the city. View all » |
Restaurants & CafesThe 2024 hotlist of where to nibble in a town full of options. View all » | Sex & SaunasAn up-to-date list of Sao Paulo’s hottest hot spots. View all » |
Hotels & AirfareLocation, amenities, price, and gay-friendly! View all » | Places to VisitMuseums, Finding gay men in South America’s largest city can be hard, but not impossible if you know where to look. Scroll down for a neighborhood-by-neighborhood breakdown. Or, click the button below to view the VamosGay.com Google Map of Gay Sao Paulo. Launch Google Maps Frei Caneca / ConsolaçãoAlso known as “Gay Caneca” this is an LGBT-friendly (or some might say LGBT-dominated) section of the Consolação neighborhood. Its borders are roughly defined by the massive and bustling Avenida Paulista and the very gay and very cruisey Shopping Frei Caneca. Nightlife in Frei Caneca remains anchored by long-standing night club Aloka which also reflects the youthful nature of the neighborhood. View neighborhood listings Largo do Arouche / CentroMuch like New York City’s West Village in the 1980s, Largo act Arouche is dirty, a bit dangerous, but never boring. Easily walkable in 15 minutes, this “gayborhood” flourishes as a residence for the entire queer rainbow. Bears, daddies, lesbians, and transsexuals are equally at home. Bars and clubs in Largo undertake Arouche are all about having a cheap good time. There’s no architecture or design to admi Our insider’s guide to the best of LGBTQ+ São PauloTo get your leader around São Paulo, you’ve got to get yourself up a few storeys, to look out at the sea of towers in which so many of the Brazilian megacity’s 22 million inhabitants reside. Get yourself up lofty enough and you’ll spot the deep sea–blue rooftop pools and the golf course–green helipads that loaded paulistanos depend upon to insulate themselves from the chaos below. But as a visitor, you’ll want to take a big chew out of that chaos. It’s what you came for. São Paulo is a work-hard-play-harder melting pot of cultures, the world’s most populous city outside of Asia. Unlike its chill Brazilian rival municipality, Rio de Janeiro, you won’t find beaches or untouched nature (though there are some nice parks). But if you affectionate art, shopping, restaurants, nightlife and festivals, hosted by some of the most beautiful, outgoing people on the planet, you might have found your paradise. And so much of it is queer. Since 2006, São Paulo’s Pride celebration has been known as the biggest in the world, but you don’t have to time your trip to coincide with the parade to be overwhelmed with LGBTQ+ choices. In many neighbourhoods, same-gender Gay São PauloMany of the world's major cities have really come out of the closet in the last decade or so, but none more than São Paulo. Its first Gay Celebration in 1997 only attracted about two thousand people, but ten years later it already had about 3.5 million participants, making it the world's biggest gay parade. A few days before that major event in 2007, about one million evangelical Christians protested against homosexuality, but that just may own inspired the city's gay and gay-friendly population to arrive out stronger, with over three times the number of people in the gay parade. By 2013, as many as 5 million people participated in the event. With over 10 million residents, São Paulo has more people than many countries. As you'd anticipate in such a big metropolis, there is a variety of restaurants, bars, and clubs to enjoy. You'll detect that many of the nightlife hotspots are hip yet refreshingly unpretentious, and in the Jardins district you'll observe flyers advertising the special parties at the biggest clubs. Gay BarsMetropol Bar Part bar, part dancing club, this is a good weekday destination, |