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Iguazu Falls

Iguazu Falls

Home Brazil DestinationsIguazu Falls
Gate8 Global Team

Iguazu Falls straddles the Brazil–Argentina border and is one of the most spectacular waterfall systems on Earth — wider than Niagara, taller than Victoria Falls. The Brazilian side (entry roughly $18) gives the sweeping panoramic view in a single 1–2 hour trail; the Argentine side (roughly $22) gets you up close to more individual falls, including the thunderous Devil's Throat, and takes a full day. Most visitors who can manage the border crossing do both.

Iguazu Falls is the kind of natural wonder that photos genuinely undersell — 275 individual waterfalls spread across nearly two miles of jungle-lined cliff, loud enough to feel in your chest from a distance. The only real planning question is whether to see it from Brazil, Argentina, or both.

Brazilian side or Argentine side — or both?

Brazilian sideArgentine side
What you getThe panoramic overview — most of the falls in one sweeping viewUp-close catwalks over individual falls, including the Devil's Throat
Time needed1–2 hours on a single trailA full day across multiple trails
Entry price~$18 (Parque Nacional do Iguaçu)~$22 (Parque Nacional Iguazú)
Best forA quick, spectacular overview if you're short on timeThe deeper, more immersive experience
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If you're planning to see both sides, you're crossing an international border, so bring your passport regardless of which side you enter from. If you're traveling on Brazil's e-visa (US, Canadian, and Australian citizens as of 2025), it's multiple-entry, so crossing into Argentina and back into Brazil isn't a problem — just don't forget the physical document.

What it costs

ItemApprox. cost
Brazilian side entry~$18
Argentine side entry~$22
Macuco Safari (Brazil) or Gran Aventura boat ride (Argentina)~$75–85 — a soaking, high-speed boat ride right up to the falls
Hotel in Foz do Iguaçu (Brazil) or Puerto Iguazú (Argentina), per night$40–120

Getting there

Foz do Iguaçu (IGU) on the Brazilian side has its own airport with direct flights from São Paulo (about 2 hours) and Rio de Janeiro (about 2.5 hours), making it an easy add-on to either city. Puerto Iguazú's airport on the Argentine side works the same way from Buenos Aires. Most visitors base themselves on one side and cross for a day trip to the other.

Devil's Throat — the highlight

Garganta do Diabo (Devil's Throat) is the falls' single most dramatic feature — a U-shaped chasm where multiple falls converge into one deafening column of water and mist. It's most dramatically viewed from the Argentine side's dedicated walkway, though the Brazilian side offers a striking distant panorama of it as well.

Wildlife to watch for

  • Coatis — raccoon-like animals that roam both park sides freely and have learned to approach visitors for food. Don't feed them; they can bite, and park rangers actively discourage it.
  • Toco toucans and hundreds of other bird species in the surrounding subtropical rainforest.
  • Butterflies — the falls' spray creates a microclimate that draws dense clouds of them along several trails, especially in the warmer months.

When to visit

Iguazu is a year-round destination. The rainy season (roughly December–March) brings higher, more dramatic water flow but also bigger crowds and heat; the drier months (June–September) bring a calmer, slightly less thunderous falls and more comfortable walking temperatures. There's no bad season — just a different mood.

Mistakes worth avoiding

  • Only budgeting a single day if you want to see both sides — the border crossing, immigration lines, and the drive between park entrances eat more time than people expect.
  • Skipping a poncho or dry bag for a phone on the boat rides — the Macuco Safari and Gran Aventura genuinely soak everyone on board.
  • Forgetting insect repellent — the humid rainforest setting means mosquitoes are a real factor, especially near dawn and dusk.

Where to stay in Iguazu Falls — hotels

Check live availability and prices for hotels, resorts, and guesthouses in Iguazu Falls on Booking.com:

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Questions people actually ask

Should I visit the Brazilian side or Argentine side of Iguazu Falls?
If you only have half a day, the Brazilian side gives the better single panoramic view in less time. If you have a full day, the Argentine side's network of catwalks and the Devil's Throat viewpoint are the more immersive experience. Many visitors do both across two days.
Do I need a separate visa to cross into Argentina from the Brazilian side of Iguazu?
You need your passport for the border crossing regardless of nationality, and Argentina has its own entry rules (most Western nationalities enter visa-free for short stays). If you hold Brazil's e-visa, it's multiple-entry, so re-entering Brazil afterward isn't an issue.
How do I get to Iguazu Falls?
Fly into Foz do Iguaçu (Brazil) or Puerto Iguazú (Argentina) — both have direct flights from their respective countries' major cities (about 2–2.5 hours from São Paulo or Rio; about 2 hours from Buenos Aires).

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