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Oct 26, 2025

UK updates Brazil travel advisory, highlights methanol poisoning risk

UK updates Brazil travel advisory, highlights methanol poisoning risk
On 26 October 2025 the UK Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO) kept its Brazil travel advice at ‘still-current’ status and drew renewed attention to a spike in methanol-poisoning cases that has been reported in nightlife hotspots across the country.

Although the last formal update to the page was published on 7 October 2025, the advisory’s “still current at” time-stamp rolled over to 26 October, signalling to British nationals and their employers that the guidance remains fully in force. The FCDO continues to warn against all but essential travel to large portions of the western Amazon basin and urges heightened vigilance in urban centres where drink-spiking incidents have occurred.

For global mobility managers, the practical implication is clear: duty-of-care programmes for assignees, business travellers and dependants headed to Brazil should now include specific briefings on avoiding counterfeit or adulterated alcoholic beverages. Companies are also advised to review their emergency medical protocols to ensure Brazilian hospitals equipped to treat methanol poisoning are listed in their assistance networks.

The advisory does not change visa requirements, but it reinforces the importance of maintaining comprehensive travel insurance and documenting itineraries. Employers should remind travellers that medical costs incurred as a result of reckless behaviour—such as consuming bootleg spirits—are often excluded from corporate policies.

Finally, the FCDO note serves as a timely reminder that regional security dynamics can shift quickly. Programme managers should subscribe to both UK and local Brazilian alerts so they can react rapidly if risk levels change in the run-up to Brazil’s peak holiday season.
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