Santana do Livramento

Santana do Livramento, locally referred to as just Livramento, is in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. It's on the border with Uruguay, right across from the Uruguayan city of Rivera.

Seen from a hill on the border with Rivera

Understand

Livramento's big attraction is its location on the border: Uruguayans come for the inexpensive goods on the Brazilian side, and Brazilians come for the duty-free shops on the Uruguayan side. Travellers from other countries can take advantage of both. Livramento also gives you the chance to stand with a foot in each country—a cool photo opportunity.

To a large extent, Santana and Rivera function as one city: you can easily take a day trip from one to the other without even bringing your passport. You may not even notice you're crossing the border, which is marked by inconspicuous white border markers. If you decide to venture further into the other country, though, make sure to stop at immigration (located next to Siñeriz Shopping in Rivera) to get your passport stamped out of one country and into the other.

That being said, they are two different cities, with separate bus systems and administration and somewhat different vibes. Being in Brazil, Santana tends to be cheaper than Rivera, has more Brazilian foods and Brazilian-style buffet restaurants, and has more Portuguese than Spanish. On both sides of the border, though, it's not uncommon to have a conversation where one side is speaking Spanish and the other Portuguese, or where both sides are speaking Portuñol, a mixture of the two languages.

Get in

Access is done mainly overland, as the closest commercial airport is 230km away in Uruguaiana, (URG IATA), and it has just a handful of flights a week.

From Brazil

Porto Alegre, the state's capital, is located about 500km away, a 7h ride by bus (100-135 BRL or 30-40 USD).

  • 🌍 Santana do Livramento bus station, Brazil (Rodoviária de Santana do Livramento) (R. Sen. Salgado Filho, 335).

From Uruguay

From Rivera, you can just walk or drive across the border. The city is connected to other parts of Uruguay by regular bus services.

  • 🌍 Rivera bus station, Uruguay (Terminal de bus de Rivera) (calle Uruguay 551, Rivera).
Note: If you choose to cross the border by your own means (foot, car), you need to present yourself voluntarily at the border post located south of the city, inside a shopping mall (there's no border post on the highway). This is easy to miss as there's no clear separation between the two cities, but you'll incur fines if you later leave either country at a more rigorously controlled border crossing and they realize you didn't legally enter.
  • 🌍 Brazilian and Uruguayan immigration posts (inside Shopping Siñeriz). Located in a brand new shopping mall, it has an attached duty free shop and a small food court. The location is a bit remote, so if you arrive by taxi, it might be a good idea to ask it to wait for you (metered taxi rides to Rivera bus station cost 90 UYU or 3 USD), but you can also ask the shopping security guard to order one for you. Brazilian passport holders are not supposed to get Brazilian stamps in their passports, but in this border it occasionally happens.

Get around

See

  • 🌍 Praça Internacional (Parque Internacional de la Amistad). Put one foot in Brazil and one foot in Uruguay. Has some mom-and-pop shops with crafts that make nice souvenirs.

Do

Buy

Lots of inexpensive stores catering to Uruguayans are located in the area near the border and the Praça Internacional. There are also lots of duty-free shops on the Uruguayan side.

Prices tend to be listed in reais in Livramento and in pesos in Rivera, but stores on both sides are happy to accept either currency. Currency exchange places, as well as lots of stands selling contraband, can be found on the border near the Praça Internacional. The unlicensed currency exchange stands right on the border offer very good rates, better than the official exchange places nearby. They accept US dollars as well as pesos and reais.

Eat

  • 🌍 Coisa Nossa, Av. Tamandaré 1758, +55 55 3242-1160. Brazilian-style buffet: serve yourself from an extensive selection of fruits, vegetables, and more, then choose from various types of meat that the servers bring around to your table.

Drink

Sleep

Cheaper hotels are available here than in Rivera.

Connect

Cope

Consulates

Go next

gollark: DHCP is as far as I know not very necessary since devices can just autoconfigure themselves via MAC address as the space is way bigger.
gollark: LAN: you have a link local address, which is specific to an interface and only routed on the LAN, and are automatically assigned a global one mostly.
gollark: Although some have NAT.
gollark: Think of all those people with only v6 connectivity. There are certainly a few of them. Mostly on really cheap VPSes and such because IPv4 addresses are a significant fraction of their cost.
gollark: Valid. However, apioforms MAY visit those who do not support IPv6.
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