Is Recife Safe for Tourists?
Recife has a serious crime problem — that’s worth being honest about. But it’s also a city that hundreds of thousands of tourists visit every year without incident. The difference usually comes down to where you go, when you go, and how you carry yourself.
Boa Viagem — Recife’s main tourist area and the safest part of the city for visitors, with a long beachfront avenue and consistent police presence.
The Honest Assessment
Recife consistently appears in statistics on violent crime in Brazil. The metropolitan area has high rates of robbery and street crime, and some neighborhoods are genuinely dangerous for anyone — locals included. This is not a city where you can wander anywhere without thinking about it.
That said, the tourist areas of Recife — primarily Boa Viagem, Recife Antigo during the day, and Olinda — are reasonably well policed and visited safely by large numbers of travelers every year. The risk concentrates in specific neighborhoods and specific situations, not across the city uniformly.
The practical reality: if you stay in Boa Viagem, use rideshares after dark, and don’t walk around with your phone out in unfamiliar areas, your trip will almost certainly be uneventful.
Safe Areas vs Areas to Avoid
Is Recife Antigo Safe?
Recife Antigo during the day — the historic center is safe for tourists when it’s active, but changes character significantly at night on quiet evenings.
Recife Antigo is the question most tourists ask about specifically, and the answer is nuanced. During the day it’s generally fine — there’s foot traffic, open businesses, and a visible police presence around Marco Zero and the main waterfront.
On Friday evenings it’s also fine — the area fills up with people and the energy is good. The problem is quiet weeknight evenings and late nights, when the streets empty out quickly and the area feels exposed.
The practical rule: visit Recife Antigo during the day or on a Friday evening. Take a rideshare directly back to Boa Viagem when you’re done — don’t walk through adjacent neighborhoods at night.
Common Risks for Tourists
Phone and bag snatching
The most frequent issue. This happens when people walk with their phone visible in hand, especially near busy streets and beaches. Keep your phone in your pocket when you’re not using it. If you need to check something, step inside a shop or restaurant.
Beach theft
Boa Viagem beach sees opportunistic theft, particularly of bags left unattended while people swim. Don’t bring anything to the beach you can’t afford to lose. A cheap waterproof pouch for your card and cash is a good investment.
Express kidnapping
Rare but documented — someone forces you to an ATM to withdraw cash. This risk is almost entirely eliminated by using rideshares instead of walking at night, and by not withdrawing cash from ATMs on the street after dark. Use ATMs inside supermarkets or shopping centers during the day.
Scams
Less common in Recife than in Rio, but distraction-based scams do occur around tourist areas. If someone approaches you with an elaborate story or starts a conversation that feels off, keep walking.
How to Stay Safe in Recife
- Use 99 or Uber for all transport after dark — no walking through unfamiliar areas at night
- Keep your phone in your pocket on the street, especially near busy avenues and beaches
- Don’t wear expensive watches, jewelry, or carry a visible camera in non-tourist areas
- Withdraw cash from ATMs inside shopping malls or supermarkets during the day
- Stay in Boa Viagem — it’s the safest neighborhood for tourists and has everything you need
- At Boa Viagem beach, don’t leave bags unattended when you swim
- In Recife Antigo, visit during the day or on Friday evenings — not late on quiet nights
- If you’re robbed, hand over what they want — nothing you’re carrying is worth the alternative
Verdict
Our assessment
Recife requires more situational awareness than most Brazilian cities tourists visit. The risk is real but manageable. Stay in Boa Viagem, use rideshares at night, keep your phone out of sight, and don’t wander into neighborhoods you haven’t researched. Do those things and you’ll almost certainly have a trouble-free trip.