Brazil

Even if you’ve never seen it, when you imagine the Christ of Corcovado, you can’t help but smile because it’s impossible to behold the vast beauty of Brazil without feeling joy. A dreamland for music and color, Brazil fills every first-time visitor with an unparalleled sense of happiness, urging them to move forward to the rhythm of samba and discover the thousand and one wonders it holds.

“The chance to make a dream come true is what makes life truly captivating.”

From the awe-inspiring Iguazu Falls to the modern vibrance of Rio and the rhythmic beats of Salvador de Bahia, Brazil composes its history on a timeless, ivory canvas.

Anavilhanas Lodge kayak
Land for magic, romance and music.

Praia do Cassino, located in Rio Grande, is the longest beach in the world, stretching approximately 250 kilometers all the way to the border with Uruguay.

Samba and smiles

temporada

Brazil is stunning year-round, but from May to October, the skies clear, taking the rain with them, allowing the sun to bathe the ocean in a brilliant shade of blue.

Tropical humid

21º average

May to October

Mild days with higher humidity and cool nights

experiencias NUBA

Brasil Niteroi Museo Rio de Janeiro

Art and architecture in Niteroi

Tour the Museum of Contemporary Art of Niteroi (MAC) exclusively, before opening or after closing. Admire more than a thousand works of art in a privileged environment such as the architectural work of Oscar Niemeyer.
Jaguar en Pantanal Brasil

Protecting the jaguar and its habitat

Become champions of the jaguar and other endangered Amazonian animals with the Onçafari Jaguar Project Conservation Team, following the trail of this big cat and meeting the orphaned cubs at the rehabilitation center.
Brasil Pantanal

Adventures in the Pantanal

Sleep in a traditional fazenda in the Northern Pantanal, the largest wetland in the world, and go out in the cool of the night to experience a night photographic safari, guided by specialists in the area.

Historias de BITÁCORA

In Japan, luxury doesn’t speak. It listens. It lives in the pause between movements, in the scent of cedar after rain, in a cup of tea poured without a word. For centuries, the ryokan has embodied that quiet perfection — hospitality as ritual, simplicity as sophistication, and nature as architecture. Today, a new generation of ryokans is reimagining that heritage for the modern traveler. Some preserve the old ways untouched; others reinterpret them through design, gastronomy, and architecture that feel both timeless and entirely new.

Paradise isn’t one-size-fits-all. The same turquoise that soothes in the Maldives might thrill in Fiji or mesmerize in Bora Bora. For travelers in search of serenity, connection, or discovery, these islands promise beauty—but in very different forms. Choosing between them isn’t about geography. It’s about identity.

Paradise isn’t one-size-fits-all. The same turquoise that soothes in the Maldives might thrill in Fiji or mesmerize in Bora Bora. For travelers in search of serenity, connection, or discovery, these islands promise beauty—but in very different forms. Choosing between them isn’t about geography. It’s about identity.

There’s a new Mexico emerging—one that exists beyond the postcards and the predictable. For the modern traveler, Mexico is not just a destination but a state of mind: creative, layered, and alive with contrasts. It’s a country where design meets tradition, where centuries of culture coexist with a generation that’s redefining what modern luxury feels like.

For years, travel was measured by quantity—how far, how fast, how many stamps in a passport. But the new luxury traveler is unlearning that rhythm. Slow travel isn’t about distance or duration; it’s about presence. It’s the art of staying long enough to listen, of letting a place unfold instead of consuming it.

Luxury yachting is no longer about the yacht itself—it’s about what it allows you to experience. Privacy, rhythm, and perspective. A return to travel where time bends to your will and the horizon becomes your only itinerary. Across the Mediterranean, the Indian Ocean, and the Pacific, a new generation of vessels is redefining what it means to explore the world by sea.

Brazil