Monitor 3,000+ Live Traffic Cameras Across Brazil
From the bustling streets of São Paulo to the coastal highways of Rio Grande do Sul, access real-time traffic and street cameras covering Brazil's vast road network. Monitor federal rodovias, state highways, toll roads, and urban corridors with free 24/7 feeds from DNIT, DER agencies, concessionaires, and municipal traffic systems.
View Brazil Cameras →Brazil's road network spans over 1.56 million kilometers, connecting 210 million people across 26 states and the Federal District. According to 2025 census data, approximately 10% of Brazilian workers face daily commutes of 1 to 2 hours, with over 1.3 million people spending more than two hours daily traveling to work. Our platform aggregates live traffic cameras and street cameras from federal highway agencies, state transportation departments, toll road concessionaires, and municipal monitoring systems to deliver comprehensive coverage of Brazilian rodovias, urban corridors, and coastal highways.
São Paulo dominates camera coverage with 800+ feeds spanning the capital's intersections via CETSP, state highways through DER-SP, and toll road concessionaires like Ecovias. The metropolitan region alone hosts the densest traffic camera network in South America.
Rio de Janeiro provides 400+ cameras monitoring the city's urban corridors, beach-area avenues, and connections to Niterói via the Rio-Niterói Bridge. State highway cameras cover the Serra das Araras mountain descent and approaches to the capital.
Rio Grande do Sul maintains 250+ cameras through DAER-RS and municipal systems in Porto Alegre, plus surf and beach cameras along the coast at Torres and Tramandaí.
Santos and the Baixada Santista contribute 400+ cameras via Santos Mapeada, covering the port city's beaches, downtown areas, port facilities, and major thoroughfares throughout the coastal region.
Start Monitoring Brazilian Traffic
View live conditions across all states and plan your route with real-time camera feeds. Filter by state, city, or highway to find exactly what you need.
View All Cameras →Federal Highway Network (Rodovias Federais)
Brazil's federal highway system, maintained by DNIT (Departamento Nacional de Infraestrutura de Transportes), forms the backbone of long-distance road travel. Key corridors with camera coverage include:
BR-101 (Rodovia Translitorânea): Brazil's main coastal highway stretches over 4,800 km from Rio Grande do Sul to Rio Grande do Norte. Camera coverage spans critical segments through Santa Catarina, Paraná, and the Northeast, with toll plaza feeds from concessionaires like Autopista Litoral Sul.
BR-116: Connecting Porto Alegre to Fortaleza, this 4,500 km highway passes through the Serra do Rio do Rastro in Santa Catarina and the rugged terrain of Bahia. The southern stretch between Curitiba and São Paulo (Rodovia Régis Bittencourt) has dedicated concessionaire cameras.
Rodovia Presidente Dutra (BR-116/SP-060): The 402 km São Paulo-Rio de Janeiro corridor is one of the busiest in Latin America, handling over 33,000 vehicles per day at its primary toll plazas. Operated by CCR Nova Dutra, cameras monitor traffic flow, toll plazas, and the challenging Serra das Araras mountain descent with its sharp curves and fog-prone stretches.
Rodovia dos Bandeirantes (SP-348) and Rodovia Anhanguera (SP-330): These parallel highways connecting São Paulo to Campinas and beyond carry some of the heaviest truck traffic in Brazil. Concessionaire AutoBAn operates camera systems along both routes.
Rodovia Anchieta-Imigrantes (SP-150/SP-160): The dual highway system linking São Paulo to the Port of Santos and the Baixada Santista coast. Ecovias manages this critical corridor, with cameras covering the steep Serra do Mar descent, tunnel sections, and approach to Santos.
Concessionaire Camera Systems
Major toll road concessionaires operate their own camera networks along privatized highway stretches. Groups like CCR, Arteris, EcoRodovias, and Triunfo Concebra maintain real-time monitoring on routes including the Rodovia Presidente Dutra, Fernão Dias (SP-MG), Régis Bittencourt (SP-PR), and dozens of state highways across São Paulo, Minas Gerais, and Paraná.
Regional Coverage
São Paulo (800+ Cameras)
CETSP municipal cameras at major intersections, DER-SP state highway feeds covering SP-055, SP-123, SP-125, and SP-360, plus Ecovias toll road cameras on Anchieta-Imigrantes and Noroeste Paulista (SP-310, SP-326, SP-333). ServiceSecurity provides 100+ city monitoring feeds.
Santos & Baixada Santista (400+ Cameras)
Santos Mapeada delivers 400+ cameras covering beaches, downtown areas, port facilities, and major thoroughfares throughout Brazil's busiest port city. Ferry crossing cameras from SEMIL monitor coastal crossings along the São Paulo coastline.
Rio de Janeiro (400+ Cameras)
City traffic cameras, beach monitoring, and highway feeds covering approaches via Presidente Dutra and the Rio-Niterói Bridge. Portobello Resort cameras in Mangaratiba cover a private airstrip and surrounding areas along the Costa Verde.
Minas Gerais (300+ Cameras)
Highway cameras along Rodovia Fernão Dias (BR-381) connecting São Paulo to Belo Horizonte, plus urban cameras in the BH metro area. Concessionaire feeds from Arteris cover key segments of the mountainous terrain.
Paraná (550+ Cameras)
Comprehensive coverage of the BR-277 logistics corridor, including the Port of Paranaguá, Curitiba, and Foz do Iguaçu. Feeds from DER-PR, Catve, and major concessionaires covering the international bridges and the Serra do Mar.
Rio Grande do Sul (250+ Cameras)
DAER-RS state traffic cameras across major highways, Torres Ao Vivo beach and city cameras, surf cams from Ondas do Sul along the coast, and urban monitoring in Porto Alegre and surrounding metro areas.
Santa Catarina (450+ Cameras)
Comprehensive coverage of the BR-101 coastal corridor, including Joinville, Itajaí, and Florianópolis. Feeds from Arteris Litoral Sul, DNIT, and municipal systems covering the Pedro Ivo and Colombo Salles bridges.
Other States (150+ Cameras)
Coverage across Bahia, Goiás, Federal District (Brasília), Pernambuco, and additional states via CXTV international feeds, webcam aggregators, and municipal monitoring systems providing views from Recife to Manaus.
Weather and Driving Conditions
Tropical Rain and Flooding
Heavy tropical rains can cause sudden flooding on Brazilian highways, particularly during the wet season (October through March). Low-lying areas in São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, and coastal cities are especially vulnerable. Monitor camera feeds for standing water on roads, flooded underpasses, and reduced visibility. The Serra do Mar mountain descents (Anchieta-Imigrantes, Rodovia dos Imigrantes) face frequent landslide risks during prolonged rainfall.
Seasonal Hazards by Region:
- Southeast (SP, RJ, MG): Intense summer storms cause flash flooding in urban areas and landslides on mountain highways. Fog blankets the Serra da Mantiqueira and Serra do Mar ranges, reducing visibility on high-altitude stretches.
- South (PR, SC, RS): Fog in the southern highlands, frost on elevated highways during winter months (June-August), and occasional snowfall at the highest elevations. Strong cold fronts can bring sudden temperature drops.
- Northeast: Dust and reduced visibility during the dry season in semi-arid Sertão regions. Coastal areas face heavy rains from April through July.
- Central-West (GO, DF, MT, MS): Dry season (May-September) brings dust storms and brush fires near highways. Smoke from agricultural burning can severely reduce visibility.
Driving Tips for Brazil
Brazil Road Safety
In 2024, Brazil recorded 26,138 traffic deaths, representing a national mortality rate of 12.30 per 100,000 inhabitants. Major urban hubs like Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo account for the highest volume of incidents, while remote federal highways like the BR-101 see high concentrations of speeding violations. Using real-time cameras to identify incident locations and monitor the estimated 1.56 million kilometers of road network is a critical proactive safety measure for all drivers.
Toll Plazas (Pedágios): Privatized highways charge tolls at frequent intervals. Many concessionaires use automatic toll collection (Sem Parar / ConectCar tags). Traffic cameras at toll plazas help monitor congestion and queue lengths before you arrive.
Rodízio in São Paulo: The capital enforces license plate-based driving restrictions (rodízio) on weekdays during rush hours in the expanded central zone. Plates ending in specific numbers are prohibited on designated days. Check current restrictions before driving into central SP.
Speed Cameras (Lombadas Eletrônicas): Fixed speed cameras and radar traps are widespread on Brazilian highways and urban roads. Speed limits vary: 60-80 km/h in cities, 80-110 km/h on highways. Our traffic camera feeds can help you gauge real-time traffic speeds and conditions.
Right-Hand Driving: Brazil drives on the right side of the road. Overtaking is permitted on the left. On two-lane federal highways, use passing zones carefully and check camera feeds for traffic density before long-distance trips.
Route Planning with TrafficVision
Use the interactive map to scout your route before driving. Pin cameras along your planned path using the route builder, save frequently checked cameras to your favorites, and switch between map and grid views to monitor conditions at a glance. With 135,000+ cameras from 600+ sources across 130+ countries, you can also check conditions at international border crossings into Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay.
CET São Paulo (CETSP)
CET (Companhia de Engenharia de Tráfego) manages traffic engineering for the city of São Paulo, the largest urban area in the Southern Hemisphere. CETSP cameras cover strategic intersections across the capital, monitoring real-time traffic flow, accidents, and congestion patterns. These feeds are particularly useful during rush hours when São Paulo's notorious traffic jams can stretch for dozens of kilometers along the Marginal Tietê and Marginal Pinheiros expressways.
Santos Mapeada Coverage
Santos Mapeada provides one of the most comprehensive city camera networks in Brazil with 400+ feeds covering the port city of Santos. Cameras monitor beaches (Gonzaga, Embaré, Ponta da Praia), downtown commercial areas, the port entrance roads, and residential neighborhoods. The system offers a street-level view of daily life in one of Brazil's most important maritime cities.
Check Current Conditions
View live camera feeds to assess weather, traffic flow, and road conditions before your trip. Filter by state or search specific highways and cities.
View Cameras Now →Platform Features for Brazilian Cameras
Our platform provides 135,000+ cameras from 600+ sources worldwide, with 3,000+ focused on Brazilian coverage:
- State Filtering: Instantly filter to any Brazilian state or city
- Route Planning: Build custom routes and see all cameras along your path
- Favorites: Save frequently checked cameras for quick access
- Mobile Optimized: Check conditions on the go with responsive design
- Real-Time Updates: Camera feeds refresh automatically based on source update frequency
- Search: Find cameras by highway number, city, or landmark name
- Map and Grid Views: Choose your preferred viewing layout
Related Resources
- Paraná Traffic Guide: 550+ live cameras covering the BR-277 logistics corridor
- Santa Catarina Traffic Guide: 450+ live cameras covering BR-101 and the Itajaí Valley
- Canada Traffic Cameras: Comprehensive guide to 4,900+ cameras across all Canadian provinces
- Getting Started with Traffic Cameras: Learn how to interpret camera feeds and plan safer trips
Frequently Asked Questions
How many traffic cameras are available in Brazil?
Our platform provides access to 3,000+ live cameras across Brazil, sourced from federal highway agencies (DNIT), state departments (DER-SP, DAER-RS), municipal systems (CETSP, Santos Mapeada), toll road concessionaires, and webcam networks. Coverage spans all major states with the highest density in São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, and southern Brazil.
Can I view live rodovia cameras on Brazilian highways?
Yes. We aggregate camera feeds from major rodovias including BR-101 (coastal highway), BR-116, Rodovia Presidente Dutra (SP-RJ), Rodovia dos Bandeirantes, Anchieta-Imigrantes, and dozens of state highways. Use the search bar to find specific route numbers or filter by state.
How do I monitor live São Paulo traffic?
Filter by "São Paulo" or search for specific terms like "CETSP", "DER-SP", or highway names. São Paulo has 800+ cameras covering urban intersections via CETSP, state highways via DER-SP, and toll roads via concessionaires like Ecovias. The interactive map lets you see all available cameras across the metro area at once.
Are Brazilian traffic cameras available 24/7?
Most Brazilian traffic cameras operate 24/7, though image quality varies at night depending on street lighting and camera capabilities. Some sources refresh more frequently during daytime hours. Video feeds from toll road concessionaires and municipal systems generally provide continuous live streams.
Can I check weather conditions on Brazilian highways using traffic cameras?
Traffic cameras are an excellent way to assess real-time weather conditions including rain intensity, fog visibility, and flooding. During Brazil's wet season (October-March), check cameras along mountain highways like Anchieta-Imigrantes and the Serra das Araras for landslide risk, standing water, and reduced visibility before traveling.
Start Monitoring Brazilian Traffic Cameras
Access 3,000+ live traffic cameras covering highways, city streets, toll roads, and coastal areas across Brazil. Monitor current conditions, plan safer routes, and avoid delays with real-time feeds from São Paulo to Porto Alegre.
View All Brazil Cameras →