
The United Kingdom’s Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO) issued an updated travel-advice bulletin for Brazil, current as of **23 October 2025**. While the advisory keeps its long-standing warning against non-essential travel to several Amazonas River tributaries, it adds fresh guidance on a spate of **methanol poisoning incidents** linked to counterfeit alcoholic beverages in tourist hotspots.
For corporate mobility teams sending staff to Brazil’s North, the FCDO lists specific stretches of the Amazon, Itaquaí and Japurá Rivers where armed criminal groups and illegal miners have intensified activity. Insurers may void policies if travellers ignore the advice, a clause that could expose employers to duty-of-care liability.
The bulletin also urges heightened caution in favelas nationwide and satellite cities around Brasília after dark, underscoring that sudden police operations can trigger localized violence and transit disruption.
Although the advisory originates in London, it often shapes risk-rating models used by multinational security providers. Companies should ensure that travel-approval workflows reflect the updated no-go zones and that travellers are briefed on sourcing sealed, branded alcohol only through reputable outlets.
The FCDO reviews its guidance continuously; further changes could follow the upcoming holiday season, when river cruises and eco-lodges typically see higher foreign-visitor volumes.
For corporate mobility teams sending staff to Brazil’s North, the FCDO lists specific stretches of the Amazon, Itaquaí and Japurá Rivers where armed criminal groups and illegal miners have intensified activity. Insurers may void policies if travellers ignore the advice, a clause that could expose employers to duty-of-care liability.
The bulletin also urges heightened caution in favelas nationwide and satellite cities around Brasília after dark, underscoring that sudden police operations can trigger localized violence and transit disruption.
Although the advisory originates in London, it often shapes risk-rating models used by multinational security providers. Companies should ensure that travel-approval workflows reflect the updated no-go zones and that travellers are briefed on sourcing sealed, branded alcohol only through reputable outlets.
The FCDO reviews its guidance continuously; further changes could follow the upcoming holiday season, when river cruises and eco-lodges typically see higher foreign-visitor volumes.





