Mowando

Climate & seasons

When to visit Salvador?

By La rédaction · Updated 6/10/2026

The Editors
The Editorsauteur principal✓ Verified

"Janvier : saison sèche tropicale, foule importante, tarifs en hausse, conditions parfaites."

Expert on Salvador · 1 contributions

The best periods

The best time to visit Salvador is September to March (tropical dry season). The most recommended months are Septembre, Octobre, Novembre.

Sep, Oct, Nov, Déc, Jan, Fév, Mar

Saison sèche tropicale — la meilleure période

  • Climat tropical idéal : 26-31 °C, ciel dégagé, mer chaude (27-29 °C)
  • Conditions optimales pour le Pelourinho et les plages bahianaises
  • Carnaval de Salvador (février-mars) : trios elétricos pendant 6 jours, expérience unique
  • Lumière dorée pour la photographie des bâtiments coloniaux
  • Tarifs hôteliers au plus haut pendant Carnaval (x3-4)
  • Affluence touristique forte en décembre-janvier
  • Risque d'orages tropicaux ponctuels
Aoû

Fin d'hiver austral — fenêtre tranquille

  • Tarifs hôteliers attractifs, foule réduite
  • Climat encore agréable (24-28 °C)
  • Mer encore à 25 °C, ambiance authentique
  • Quelques pluies résiduelles possibles
  • Eau plus fraîche
Avr, Mai, Juin, Jui

Saison humide — à éviter pour les plages

  • Tarifs au plancher (-30 à -40 %)
  • Foule minimale dans le Pelourinho
  • Pelourinho moins fréquenté, ambiance plus authentique
  • Saison la plus pluvieuse : mai-juin connaissent les pluies les plus abondantes (250-300 mm/mois)
  • Plages moins attractives
  • Climat humide en ville

Month-by-month climate

Temperatures, rainfall and sunshine in Salvador across the 12 months.

JanFévMarAvrMaiJuinJuiAoûSepOctNovDéc
Min24°24°24°23°22°21°21°22°22°23°23°24°
Max30°30°29°28°27°26°26°26°27°28°29°29°
Mer28°28°28°27°26°25°25°25°25°26°26°27°
Pluie80mm100mm140mm200mm280mm250mm180mm130mm90mm80mm90mm100mm
Soleil/j8h8h7.5h6.5h6h6h6.5h7h7.5h8h8h7.5h

Tourist crowds

Monthly attendance levels (0 = empty, 100 = saturated).

Jan
85
Fév
95
Mar
80
Avr
50
Mai
35
Jui
35
Jui
50
Aoû
50
Sep
55
Oct
60
Nov
70
Déc
90

Average flight prices

Average round-trip Paris → Salvador by month.

Jan
$1,188
Fév
$1,404
Mar
$1,080
Avr
$864
Mai
$810
Jui
$810
Jui
$918
Aoû
$864
Sep
$864
Oct
$918
Nov
$972
Déc
$1,188

Frequently asked questions

How many days for Salvador?+
Minimum 3-4 nights to peacefully see essentials. D1: arrival, lunch at Mercado Modelo (traditional Bahian cuisine), guided Pelourinho visit in afternoon (Igreja de São Francisco, Casa de Jorge Amado, Largo do Pelourinho), music evening (Olodum Tuesday or Ilê Aiyê Saturday). D2: Cidade Alta (Catedral Basílica, Convento de São Francisco, Igreja do Carmo), Elevador Lacerda, lunch in Cidade Baixa, afternoon Forte da Capoeira (roda 5pm-8pm). D3: excursion to Praia do Forte (1h north, Tamar Project sea turtles, relaxing beach) or Old Salvador on your own. D4: morning Senhor do Bonfim (basilica, ribbons), afternoon Rio Vermelho (Iemanjá Festival if Feb 2, otherwise bohemian scene). Optional D5: Cachoeira excursion (110 km, colonial city and candomblé capital).
Which neighbourhood to sleep in Salvador?+
Pelourinho: maximum cultural immersion, unique vibe, restored charming pousadas (Pestana Convento do Carmo €250-400/night, Casa do Amarelindo €100-180/night, Hotel Solar dos Romeiros €60-130/night) — Uber out in the evening, constant vigilance. Barra (southern peninsula): safer, immediate beach access (Porto da Barra, Farol da Barra), seaside restaurants and bars, 10-15 min Pelourinho Uber transfer. Hotels: Sheraton Bahia (€150-280/night), Pestana Bahia Lodge (€180-300/night), Ondina Apart Hotel (€100-180/night). Rio Vermelho: northern bohemian neighbourhood, music and restaurant scene, young artist vibe, boutique hotels (Aram Yamí €150-250/night, Pousada Estrela do Mar €80-150/night). Ondina/Pituba: modern, calmer, business hotels (Mercure, Holiday Inn €90-160/night). Our recommendation: 3 nights Pelourinho + 1 night Barra or reverse to combine cultural immersion and beach.
Is Salvador dangerous?+
Salvador has a mixed safety reputation but the overwhelming majority of tourist trips run without incident, provided some rules are respected. Pelourinho (UNESCO historic centre) is safe by day (strong police presence, tourist crowds, lively atmosphere until 6pm-7pm). At night, it becomes vigilant — stay on lively streets (Terreiro de Jesus, Largo do Pelourinho, Ladeira do Carmo), avoid deserted streets, don't wear jewellery, don't pull out phone in street, prefer Uber/99 for travel. Absolutely avoid neighbourhoods: Liberdade (except Ilê Aiyê concerts), Calçada, Cidade Baixa (except Mercado Modelo by day), Subúrbio Ferroviário. Safe neighbourhoods: Pelourinho by day, Barra, Ondina, Pituba, Itaigara. Our advice: Pelourinho guided tours with accredited guides (€15-30/person, safety + cultural learning), Uber instead of street taxi, cash withdrawals only at bank branches.
Should you go to Salvador Carnival?+
Salvador Carnival (4 days late Feb-early March, dates vary with Easter) is one of the great Brazilian experiences — more participatory and popular than Rio. Differences with Rio: no Sambódromo, but trios elétricos (truck-stages with musicians) crisscrossing the city for 6 days non-stop (Daniela Mercury, Ivete Sangalo, Margareth Menezes, Bell Marques, Banda Eva), 2.5 million street participants. 3 main circuits: Campo Grande (most historic, crosses centre), Barra/Ondina (most international and chic, beach), Pelourinho (more traditional and authentic, Afro-Bahian music focused). How to participate: 1) in pipoca (popcorn, free, in roadside crowd), 2) with abadás (official bloco t-shirts, €100-500 by bloco, gives access to bloco zone behind trio), 3) with camarotes (premium private stands with open bar, €200-800/day). Hotels x3 to x4 — book 6-12 months ahead. Our recommendation: 5-6 nights during Carnival, abadás for 2-3 days (live the party), rest in pipoca (economical and authentic).
What cuisine to taste in Salvador?+
Bahian (Afro-Brazilian) cuisine is one of Brazil's richest and most original — African heritage (dendê palm oil, okra, tropical fruits) in Portuguese-Amerindian culinary frame. Must-tries. Moqueca de peixe (fish in coconut-dendê-coriander sauce, served in black clay pot, Bahian king dish — try at Maria Mata Mouro Pelourinho, Tempero da Dadá Rio Vermelho, Casa de Tereza, €25-40). Acarajé (black-eyed pea fritter in dendê, served by baianas in white in front of Igreja do Bonfim and at Largo da Mariquita Rio Vermelho, vatapá-shrimp-pepper filling, €5-8 each, absolute must-eat). Vatapá (bread-coconut-peanut-dendê-shrimp puree, acarajé filling or standalone dish, €15-25). Bobó de camarão (shrimp in cassava, festive dish, €25-35). Caruru (okra with dried shrimp, €15-25). Quindim (coconut-egg yolk yellow flan, Portuguese-Bahian dessert, €5-8). Drinks: cachaça or cajá liqueur caipirinha (Bahian cocktail), cocada (caramelised grated coconut), batidas (cachaça-fruit mixtures). Iconic restaurants: Casa de Tereza (Rio Vermelho, revisited Bahian gastronomy), Maria Mata Mouro (Pelourinho, unique atmosphere), Tempero da Dadá (Rio Vermelho), Casa do Amarelindo (Pelourinho, bay-view terrace).

Our verdict

Salvador da Bahia is Brazil's cultural and historical soul — the city condensing the country's most mixed, rhythmic and authentic dimension. The UNESCO Pelourinho (1985) is an absolute must for any cultural Brazilian trip, to complement with 2-3 additional nights at Praia do Forte or Morro de São Paulo for the beach, and 3 nights in Chapada Diamantina for spectacular nature. Our recommendation: plan minimum 4 nights in Salvador to see Pelourinho, Farol da Barra, Mercado Modelo, Forte da Capoeira (daily roda), Olodum (Tuesdays-Sundays 8pm), a respectful candomblé ceremony, and taste Bahian dendê cuisine (moqueca de peixe, vatapá, acarajé). Travel from September to March (tropical dry season) for optimal climate. For Carnival (4 days late Feb-early March), book 6-12 months ahead — it's one of Brazil's most authentic and participatory experiences. Choose a hotel in Pelourinho (cultural immersion, unique atmosphere, Uber out at night) or Barra (safer, beach access, 10-15 min Pelourinho transfer). Respect safety rules in Pelourinho (guided tours, don't walk at night outside very lively zones, keep passports in safe).

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