REVIEW · SAO PAULO
Sao Paulo, Pinheiros – Food & Graffiti Tour | in English
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Concrete Jungles Walking Tours · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Street art and snacks in Pinheiros. This Food & Graffiti tour mixes mural storytelling with real local eating, and I like how the portions feel generous instead of tiny sample bites. The main drawback: at $70 for 2 hours, it can feel pricey if you usually prefer a longer meal-focused tour.
A guide named Giuliano is frequently mentioned as friendly and fun, and the vibe stays relaxed, not rushed. You’ll end with a standout ice cream stop where you can choose two flavors, and the overall experience is built for small groups.
In This Review
- Key Highlights You’ll Feel on This Tour
- Pinheiros Murals Meet Real Food: The Point of the Tour
- How the Graffiti Walk Works (Without Feeling Like a Lecture)
- The Neighborhood Walk: What You’re Actually Doing During Those 2 Hours
- What You’ll Taste: Brazilian Snack and Sandwich Pairings
- Beer Tasting in a Local Context (Not a Separate Tour)
- Ice Cream at the End: Two Flavors, One Payoff
- Group Size and Pace: Why This Doesn’t Drag
- Price and Value: Is $70 for 2 Hours Fair?
- Vegetarian Options, Plus One Real Safety Note
- Who Should Book This Tour (And Who Might Skip It)
- Should You Book the Sao Paulo Pinheiros Food & Graffiti Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Sao Paulo, Pinheiros Food & Graffiti Tour?
- What does the tour cost?
- What’s included in the price?
- Is the tour vegetarian-friendly?
- Do I need to be prepared to walk?
- Is the tour suitable for people with food allergies?
Key Highlights You’ll Feel on This Tour

- Street art with meaning, from expression and social inclusion to community-focused messages
- Monumental mural stops on buildings around Pinheiros, with stories that make the visuals click
- Generous food tastings (small plates and appetizers), not just a few nibbles
- One craft beer included as part of the tasting portion
- Ice cream with two flavor choices at the end
- Small-group size (limited to 10, often experienced as very intimate)
Pinheiros Murals Meet Real Food: The Point of the Tour

Pinheiros is one of those São Paulo neighborhoods where you can sense two things at once: street creativity and everyday life. This tour uses that mix on purpose. Instead of treating graffiti like a photo-op, you get the background—why certain murals exist, what they’re saying, and how artists get attention even when billboards are forbidden. That context matters, because it changes how you look at the walls. You start noticing details you would normally skip.
Then the food part resets your pace. You’re not just walking from stop to stop; you’re stopping to taste. You’ll try a Brazilian traditional snack and sandwich as part of the tasting spread, plus water throughout. It’s the kind of balance that makes a 2-hour tour feel complete rather than exhausting.
Just know the tour is built around walking after you depart the market area. If you want a mostly seated experience, this won’t fit. But if you enjoy moving through a neighborhood and letting the food and art alternate naturally, it’s a strong setup.
You can also read our reviews of more food & drink experiences in Sao Paulo
How the Graffiti Walk Works (Without Feeling Like a Lecture)

The tour’s graffiti segment is built around walking through Pinheiros while focusing on monumental murals on iconic buildings. The key is the way the guide connects the art to the city. In this area, street art isn’t just decoration—it can be politics, identity, social inclusion, and a workaround for advertising limits. You’ll hear the stories behind the artworks, and you’ll get a chance to react and share what you notice.
Here’s why this format is useful: when you understand one mural’s themes, you’re better at reading the next one. You’ll pick up patterns—recurring symbols, similar messages, and the difference between public art that aims to inform versus art that aims to provoke or include. That’s what makes it more than “look at this cool wall.”
It also helps that this is a small group. You’ll have space for questions, and the guide’s attention doesn’t vanish into a crowd. A guide like Giuliano is often described as both friendly and fun, which matters because graffiti can get intense fast. A good host keeps the tone approachable while still explaining what’s going on.
The Neighborhood Walk: What You’re Actually Doing During Those 2 Hours

The tour is divided into two parts. First, you’ll explore the street art in Pinheiros. After that, you switch into the tasting portion where you’ll eat and drink.
You should expect:
- A start from a market area, followed by walking as the tour continues
- Time spent on multiple mural locations on buildings in the neighborhood
- A shift into food stops for small plates and appetizers
One practical consideration: the tour starts strictly on time, and once it has started, joining late isn’t available. The guide also won’t be checking a phone during the tour. So I’d plan your arrival buffer like you would for a flight connection—arrive early enough that you can find the group calmly.
If you’ve got good shoes and a willingness to walk a bit, the pace should feel manageable. Reviews also point to a relaxed flow with plenty to see, but not so many stops that you’re sprinting.
What You’ll Taste: Brazilian Snack and Sandwich Pairings

The food portion is designed to show you more than one “style” of Brazilian casual eating. You’ll try:
- Brazilian traditional snack and sandwich
- Food tasting served as small plates and appetizers
- Water included
The big win here is that the tastings don’t feel like token samples. One reviewer specifically called out that it wasn’t a half sandwich or a tiny bite—it felt like a full serving. That’s important at this price point. If you only wanted a few bites, a cheaper option would make sense. But if you want to leave having genuinely eaten, this setup is more satisfying.
Also, the tour is described as loved by vegetarians and omnivores, and it includes vegetarian options. If you eat a plant-forward diet, you’re not forced into a “no thanks” list. And if you eat meat, you still get the neighborhood’s traditional flavors without feeling like the menu is trying to please one narrow group.
Beer Tasting in a Local Context (Not a Separate Tour)

Beer is included, and it’s not just a free drink thrown in. You’ll have a beer tasting that includes one craft beer. That matters because craft beer tasting usually works best when it’s tied to the food and the setting, not when it’s tacked on randomly.
In a short 2-hour tour, this portion gives you a little extra Brazilian atmosphere. You’re walking Pinheiros, hearing about murals, then tasting local food, then trying one craft beer that fits the moment. It turns the tour into more of a shared experience and less of a checklist.
One caution: the tour notes that it’s not suitable for people with food allergies. That’s not something to “hope is fine.” If allergies apply to you, you’ll need to choose a different plan where ingredients can be confirmed.
A few more Sao Paulo tours and experiences worth a look
Ice Cream at the End: Two Flavors, One Payoff

The last stop is ice cream, and it’s the kind of detail that turns a normal walking tour into something you remember. The tour includes one of the best ice creams you’ll ever have—plus the fun twist: you can choose two flavors.
Why this works: ice cream at the end is an easy way to mark the finish line. It also gives your group a shared moment where everyone slows down and enjoys something sweet after walking. Reviews mention it as a cute touch, and that you can pick your flavors, which makes it feel more personal than a fixed dessert.
Group Size and Pace: Why This Doesn’t Drag
This is a small-group experience. The listing information says it’s limited to 10 participants, and the tour highlights also describe it as up to eight people—either way, you’re not dealing with a big herd. That affects your experience in real ways:
- You’re more likely to get your question answered
- The guide can keep an eye on the group
- You can enjoy each stop rather than quickly moving through them
The tour also aims for a relaxed pace. One review noted there were plenty to see but that it didn’t feel rushed. That’s exactly what I look for in a short tour. Two hours is tight, so you don’t want frantic stop-to-stop energy. You want enough time to look closely and then actually taste what you came for.
Price and Value: Is $70 for 2 Hours Fair?

At $70 per person for a 2-hour tour, you’re paying for three things: a guided walking experience, included tastings, and the craft beer. You’re not just buying a street art walk—you’re buying the combination of graffiti context + food servings + beer + water + ice cream.
What’s included:
- Food tasting (small plates and appetizers)
- Beer tasting (including one craft beer)
- Water
- An English live tour guide (and the guide supports multiple languages, including Portuguese, Spanish, and Italian)
What’s not included:
- Drinks and extra food
So is it value? I’d say it can be solid if:
- You want more than one tasting, not just a quick snack
- You care about stories behind street art (not only photos)
- You prefer a small group rather than a long DIY plan
One review did flag that the price felt a bit high. That’s fair to consider if you’re expecting more time or a larger variety of dishes. But the same review also praised generous portions, and that’s the deciding factor. If the servings are truly full and not just “a taste,” then $70 starts to make sense as a package.
Vegetarian Options, Plus One Real Safety Note

This tour offers vegetarian options and is described as loved by vegetarians as well as omnivores. That’s a big deal, because many food-and-walk tours either skip vegetarian travelers or offer a sad substitute.
But there’s also a firm limit: it’s not suitable for people with food allergies. The data doesn’t promise allergy accommodation, so I wouldn’t treat this as an allergy-friendly choice. If you have allergies, you’ll want a tour that explicitly handles ingredient-level restrictions.
If you’re vegetarian without allergies, you’re in a better position. You can focus on enjoying the neighborhood flavors rather than worrying you’ll be left out.
Who Should Book This Tour (And Who Might Skip It)
This tour is a good fit if you want:
- A short, guided way to experience Pinheiros
- Street art with meaning, not just quick stops
- Real tastings that include snack + sandwich, beer, and ice cream
- A small group experience where you can ask questions
You might want to skip it if:
- You’re dealing with food allergies
- You don’t like walking portions after the market
- You’re mainly after a longer, meal-heavy food tour (this is timed at 2 hours)
Also, if you like travel days that mix culture and comfort—art first, then food—you’ll probably enjoy the pacing.
Should You Book the Sao Paulo Pinheiros Food & Graffiti Tour?
If you like your São Paulo experiences with both eyes open—one on the streets and one on the plate—this is worth booking. The combination of mural storytelling, generous tastings, one included craft beer, and a fun two-flavor ice cream ending is a strong package for a tight schedule.
My decision rule: book it if you want a guided “neighborhood feel” tour that delivers actual eating. Skip it if you expect an allergy-safe menu or you want a longer, sit-down food experience.
FAQ
How long is the Sao Paulo, Pinheiros Food & Graffiti Tour?
The tour lasts 2 hours.
What does the tour cost?
It costs $70 per person.
What’s included in the price?
You get food tasting (small plates and appetizers), a beer tasting that includes one craft beer, water, and an English live tour guide.
Is the tour vegetarian-friendly?
Yes. The tour offers vegetarian options.
Do I need to be prepared to walk?
Yes. After leaving the market area, there will be a walking portion.
Is the tour suitable for people with food allergies?
No. The tour is not suitable for people with food allergies.





























